Mark_Larson
Enlightened
Raleigh officials envision "world's first" LED lit city
While it's no secret that LEDs light up the night in a more efficient (albeit expensive) manner, few locales have given the idea of lighting up the town en masse with LEDs any serious consideration. In a feat that would surely oust Brussles' Dexia Tower in terms of magnitude, city officials in Raleigh, North Carolina are hoping to make the Capital City the "world's first LED city." Reportedly envisioned by the mayor, officials are teaming up with RTP-based Cree, Inc. in order to "save money and help the environment," and in a pilot program completed late last year, a LED-equipped parking deck purportedly burned "40-percent less energy" than those with "standard lighting systems." Additionally, the quality and brightness of the lighting was said to have improved, which paved the way for LEDs to hit up street lights, architectural and accent lighting, and pedestrian and walkway lights over the next 18 months. If things go as planned, the entire city will "convert permanently to LED lighting," hopefully saving around $80,000 a year in parking deck utility bills alone -- and hey, if nobody in charge can figure out how to use an extra 80 large per year, there's a few potholes craters on Hillsborough Street that could use some attention.
My view:
Don't believe the hype.
LED is nowhere near a mature technology yet. LEDs may look cool in your computer case and give a brighter light than those tiny incandescent flashlight bulbs, but trying to replace big gas discharge bulbs with LEDs is just insanity.
1. LEDs need LOTS of heatsinking. Their l/W output is terrible, and unlike an incandescent, halogen or gas discharge bulb, the heat can't be thrown out the front, it HAS to be heatsinked.
2. LEDs are tiny, tiny sources of light - they will cause lots of glare if not used with diffusers. Whereas gas discharge bulbs don't suffer with diffusers.
3. They're too expensive, and the fancy "More than 100 lumens per watt" are invariably tiny LEDs running at less than 1 watt.
4. The parking garage bulbs are not incandescent - they are already high-efficiency mercury vapor/metal halide or very high-efficiency high pressure sodium or ultra-high efficiency low pressure sodium.
So in conclusion, don't believe the hype.