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Deluxe photocontrol cover
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The "deluxe" yard lights by Regent/Cooper Lighting (or branded "Utilitech" if purchased at Lowe's) had a bonus feature on their otherwise cheap photocontrols: a snazzy cover with a graduated window, so you can adjust the amount of light entering the photo eye window (assuming the cheap PC hasn't failed already). This is great for lighting displays, as you can make your light operate while other lights in the room are on without covering the electric eye with an unsightly piece of electrical tape (which doesn't work well on these controls as the light still gets in from the top...you have to tape over the whole thing).
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How does this secure to the PC? Does it just go right over it without latching to it at all? It seems like the cover would just lift upward and off the PC if the wind was just right. Afterall, the wind can lift out the entire PC if it's not properly locked in (I've seen it plenty of times and other times where the base stays in place and the cover of the PC blows off). A couple times I've heard of the PC socket itself actually cracking and breaking (typically on an older light that's been dayburning for years) where the PC falls out because the PC socket is all cracked and nothing's left to hold it in. Or sometimes the PC cracks and falls apart when the lineman goes to remove the old dayburning PC after years of heat drying out the plastic.
This former teacher of mine also did maintenance for the school and knows what a Universal Therm-O-Matic ballast is though! (In addition to replacing a ballast). I have however told him about the dangers of 34 watters old older ballasts though.
Although he did once ask me: "Can you still even GET 40 watt tubes anymore"? (Being used to the 34w stuff used by places like schools in the 90s-ish when he worked there)
Yeah you'd think he would have noticed but I think he probably had an electrician do the work and if my teacher simply said "take this light down and put up this one", the electrician would have done so with no questions asked. Some people are so afraid to even do minimal electrical work and others have no problems doing their own electrical work. Typically the people who do their own electrical work are the ones who shouldn't be doing it though. He said he wish he knew me when the light started dayburning since I could of told him how to fix it (heck, I would have given him a PC too, since I have a bunch.) I think he mentioned the refractor was missing a chunk on the bottom too but he had never bothered with it since it didn't affect performance (the light's already open-bottom). I wonder what the old NEMA head was. The lamp was probably a lifeguard since it was a BT28 (I drew a picture of a BT and ED lamp and asked him which it looked like. He said he's pretty sure it was a BT) and it was coated. I say lifguard because if it made it from before the early 80s to the late 2000s without dimming to the point of uselessness, it must have been a lifeguard lamp. I wonder what brand the NEMA head was. NEMA heads weren't used by the electric company around here (bracket arm fixtures were used a little but they're extremely rare to find) so the previous owner of the home must have gotten it from a hardware store or from an electrical supply.