There's only one button. It can either be "in" or "out". When "out" the light stays off all the time. When "in" it's set to this dumbass 15 second mode.
I've tried pushing it a few times, have tried holding it, have tried seeing if there's some third state the button can be in, nothing.
Light switch > me![]()
this
it should be at least 5 minutes
or 10 minutes
^_^
put this in the sensor area
![]()
Are the lights fluorescent?
If they are, that's going to kill them in a damn big hurry - fluorescents really don't like frequent power cycling.
Save electricity, annoy people, and require more frequent bulb replacement. :confused;
Though I guess the whole power-cycling thing with fluorescents isn't really common knowledge. The manufacturers' only hint that power cycling is bad would come from voluntary labels such as:And this is the problem with a lot of these "green" ideas. People implement them haphazardly thinking that they'll save the planet when they just cause more harm than good.
Are the lights fluorescent?
If they are, that's going to kill them in a damn big hurry - fluorescents really don't like frequent power cycling.
Save electricity, annoy people, and require more frequent bulb replacement. :confused;
Though I guess the whole power-cycling thing with fluorescents isn't really common knowledge. The manufacturers' only hint that power cycling is bad would come from voluntary labels such as:
"30,000hrs life at 12hrs per start
10,000hrs life at 4hrs per start"
Here's a cookie. Don't forget to chew it before swallowing. :awe:Wow... It's almost like it's the number of starts that is the chief limiting factor.
ZV
Some people are just stupid. I've seen faucets where it only runs as long as a part of it is pushed in. That means you soap your hands, get soap all over this button, do a shitty job of rinsing your other hand, then switch back and forth to get as much soap off your hands as possible. It's almost like some people are trying to make the most inefficient design possible.
Motion sensors can actually be a good thing if implemented properly.
A few of the classrooms at the local community college are so equipped. Real PITA when they shut off the lights in the middle of a test or lecture. Minor movements such as students writing aren't enough to trip the sensor...you have to actually wave your arms or walk down the aisle.![]()
This. I have the sensor in my office and it works fine. It doesn't take much movement to turn it on.
It's entirely possible that it's harder to tweak correctly in a very large room. Or the contractor/custodian was too lazy to adjust it properly.
This requires both thought and some additional expense to be incurred at the time of installation. We love to have short-term gains at the expense of long-term costs - and planning is also an additional cost, so it gets hacked.Motion sensors can actually be a good thing if implemented properly. When a space is occupied per schedule the motion sensor should be disabled. Then after hours it could be active so when the custodians come in to do the floors the lights will turn on for them. After that scheduled time if the motion sensor is triggered it could send an alarm condition of intrusion, etc.
With spaces beneath a roof skylights can be installed so they provide supplemental illumination. A photosensor would then allow the lights to be dimmed proportionately to the outside insolation. If daytime dim conditions are necessary for watching films, etc. the skylights can be equipped with shutters or LCD panels that allow them to be closed off.
When Penn State/State College built their new college/minor league baseball stadium they had numerous motion sensing lights set with a motion threshold that was entirely too short. I'd be treating a patient in the first aid room, and without gross movement the light would go out within 15-20 seconds. That was fantastic.
This requires both thought and some additional expense to be incurred at the time of installation. We love to have short-term gains at the expense of long-term costs - and planning is also an additional cost, so it gets hacked.
Motion sensor for $15 at Walmart? Good, get it. Done.
"We need to keep replacing fluorescent tubes every 2 months because of excessive wear? And we need to keep replacing the motion sensors due to "tampering"? Why didn't anyone think of this ahead of time?":awe:
Some rooms on campus had motion-activated lighting. I don't know if it had presence detection, or how its threshold and timing were set, but I never had a light go out on me while I was still in the room.
Well-implemented lighting is pretty cool to see in action though.
Uhh, because I get to sit at the teacher's desk?
I'm guessing the lights in the Walmart freezers are fluorescent, which I thought was dumb when they added the motion sensing for every ~6' length of freezer. You'd walk down the aisle and it would light up as the ones behind you went out. The things must have been on/off a thousand times per day.Though I guess the whole power-cycling thing with fluorescents isn't really common knowledge. The manufacturers' only hint that power cycling is bad would come from voluntary labels such as:
"30,000hrs life at 12hrs per start
10,000hrs life at 4hrs per start"
People capable of solving this kind of puzzle may see a pattern in that, and deduce that more startups = less life. However, I've only ever seen that label on some Philips fluorescent tube packages, though I don't really go around looking at a whole bunch of lighting products.
And I think if you tried to explain the workings of a fluorescent tube to the layman, much less anything about the stress that power cycling generates, you'd probably cause a mild stroke.
I'm guessing the lights in the Walmart freezers are fluorescent, which I thought was dumb when they added the motion sensing for every ~6' length of freezer. You'd walk down the aisle and it would light up as the ones behind you went out. The things must have been on/off a thousand times per day.
Though maybe they aren't fluorescent? And I actually don't recall that happening lately. I think they've been always on and that motion crap was temporary.