2xTrinity said:
Those may be color enhanced High Pressure Sodium -- basically just a standard HPS with extra additives to improve the color rendering (make it look more like incan than typical sodium) in exhange for an efficiency hit. It may even be some sort of hybrid -- like a HPS with a regular incandescent lamp inside the envelope to act as a current limiting resistor, I believe there used to be some mercury vapor lamps sold for household use like that, not sure if any exist for High Pressure Sodium. There are also metal halides that are warmer that I see used in grocery stores to light up produce etc -- those just look white though with a slight "rosy" tint, not at all like incandescent.
OK, thanks; I wasn't sure if they were a new kind of sodium, or a metal halide, which I wasn't sure of either. I guess the halides are alot like mercury, right? The "pure" white, similar to mercury, but not as bluish? Mercuries can be pinkish as well, unless those were halides as well. (I used to see the pinkish looking ones when I first became interested in mercuries in the 70's. I'm not sure if I remember hearing of "metal halide" back then).
The new high color temperature car headlights are halides, right? Or are some of those mercury? Some are very bluish, and one I saw the other night was outright pink (I compared it to the HPS street lights, and it was similar, but without the yellow). Some appear to change color temperature from an incandescent hue to a mercury hue as the viewing angle changes.
I guess the efficiency reduction would be why this new sodium has not replaced the HPS in street lighting? (I alway hoped they would come out with a more white color that would be more eficient, and replace the "peach" that had become universal on city streets. LED's might be a hope, but they have not caught on yet as street lights). The ones I am talking about seem to be used mostly indoors. Some elevated subway platforms in the Bronx (which were retored to a "retro" look) used them, and it was obviously supposed to be a throwback to the original incandescent lighing.
Then there are some that do seem to fluctuate between an incandescent look, and HPS, and some being different shades inbetween. I think some of the platform fixtures do have some sort of incandescent backup, for you see the peach HPS color go off, then it is incandescent white. I don't know if both are in the same bulb, though.
I've seen the hybrid Mercury/incandescent before. They still use the floodlight version of this in many jewelery store windows in the Diamond District. One person once gave me an extra bulb from somewhere, but it was too bright, and when it went off, neither the mercury or incandescent would come back on untill after a cooloff period. So that was not very good four households at all. I didn't know they were even used as such. I thought I was the only one who wanted such a thing, so I could have a mercury in a regular fixture without a ballast. I did perfer having only mercury without the incandescent, though. I'm not sure if there were any other "self-ballasting mercury" bulbs that used some other method besides an incandescent filament. I thought I had heard of one where the ballast was in the base. Now, I don't need that at all, as LED bulbs will be the best substitute. The problem with those is waiting for the price to come down, and the lumens to go up.
I don't know if there were ever any sodium bulbs with incandescent filaments.