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Filename: | IMG_20161206_104309.jpg |
Album name: | traffic light1 / Indoor Fixtures |
Keywords: | Indoor_Fixtures |
Filesize: | 610 KiB |
Date added: | Dec 21, 2016 |
Dimensions: | 2250 x 3000 pixels |
Displayed: | 263 times |
URL: | http://www.galleryoflights.org/mb/gallery/displayimage.php?pid=21279 |
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BTW, I recently got eight vintage emergency heads (unbranded, but probably from the 1970s since they're all chrome) that use 6V PAR lamps with terminals on them (no socket used). I'm repurposing the heads by installing 120V nightlight lamps in them and don't need the lamps. The lamps are seven Westinghouse lamps. All work; I tested them with an 18V battery by wiring three lamps in series. Very bright too! Here they are. I know you use a lot of emergency lights so I figured I'd ask if you want them. Pretty cool lamps but I've got no use for them. We could do a trade or you can just have them. Would rather see someone enjoy the lamps instead of having them sit in my house collecting dust lol.
Yep they're remote heads for a central system. I thought they'd make really cool low-output accent lights for a movie room or something (I don't have a home theater, but if I did, that's where I'd use them lol). The lamps are about 5-1/2 or 5-3/4" diameter, so I think PAR46 is right. The eighth lamp was a GE and it was marked 20-something watts but it broke. Looked like a newer replacement for one of the Westinghouse lamps. The center of the glass on the front of all the lamps has the Westinghouse (W) logo too.
I have two NOS SURE-LITES units from the 1990s. The battery cases are steel but the halogen heads are plastic. they didn't come with batteries though. One is still in the box and the other's box was yucky so I cleaned the fixture and mounted it on the wall in my basement (not hooked up though). I think the plastic halogen heads on the SURE-LITES units are GE...