BigSkyBound
06-20-2012, 06:30 AM
Hi. New to this forum and wading into the wonderful worldof LED lighting for museums. Our museum exhibits primarily large over the roadtransportation artifacts such as cars, trucks, wagons, sleighs, etc. They rangefrom all-wood bodied vehicles, such as a 1770s sleigh to all-steel deliveryvans built in the 1980s. The museum has recently modernized its electricalsystems from the 1940s factory wiring (we are in an old body work factory) thatran a mind-boggling variety of cobbled together lighting. A small electricalfire encouraged my Board to fund rewiring the building, as well as installing anew lighting system.
To maintain a factory aesthetic, we installed large green warehouse lights withLED bulbs for overall gallery lighting. The track is all in, but we have groundto a halt on the fixtures and bulbs. One museum lighting specialist recommendedwe use this new Firefly bulb in a very versatile Altman PAR 38 can. What I likeabout these is that the LED array and driver can be replaced as technology improveswithout replacing the whole Firefly platform http://fireflyledlight.com/ (http://fireflyledlight.com/). We have theopportunity to get these at a very good price, as the lighting consultantreally wants our museum in his portfolio.
Conventional wisdom is that the incandescent light bulb is becoming extinct andthat LED technologies are on the rise, even in museum environments. Sinceseveral of my Board members are themselves members of a species that is becomingextinct, how do I sell them on the new technology and its up-front expense?
To maintain a factory aesthetic, we installed large green warehouse lights withLED bulbs for overall gallery lighting. The track is all in, but we have groundto a halt on the fixtures and bulbs. One museum lighting specialist recommendedwe use this new Firefly bulb in a very versatile Altman PAR 38 can. What I likeabout these is that the LED array and driver can be replaced as technology improveswithout replacing the whole Firefly platform http://fireflyledlight.com/ (http://fireflyledlight.com/). We have theopportunity to get these at a very good price, as the lighting consultantreally wants our museum in his portfolio.
Conventional wisdom is that the incandescent light bulb is becoming extinct andthat LED technologies are on the rise, even in museum environments. Sinceseveral of my Board members are themselves members of a species that is becomingextinct, how do I sell them on the new technology and its up-front expense?