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My REAL General Electric NEMA labels
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These are from Joe Maurath Jr. A big thanks to him. The pic is pretty self-explanitory. These are geniune GE labels from the 80's. One of the 175w MV tags is on my yardblaster and one MH tag is on my OV25's remote ballast box. The rest are tacked to a bulletin board in my basement. (don't worry, i tacked them through the paper backing, not the actual label)
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GE seemed to be very inconsistant too from what i've seen though pictures and from info passed form Joe M to me. Some numbers were narrower than others. Your 25 looks dead-on to me, though i've never seen the narrow post 80s 25 in person to tell for sure. GE used the "McCann Lighting" style font for all wattages from when they started using tags until somwhere in the 80s, depending on wattage. Then the 10 and 25 were in narrow standard Helvectica for a bit while the others were narrowish then the 10 and 25 became narrowish too. It seems only the HPS 10 was ever wide while both the MV and HPS 25 were wide and the 250W MV tags remained wide. The 5 and 7 were simply bolded helvectica after they discontinued the 70s-80s font from what i saw. i personally like their 70s-80s font best.
It seems GE even went back and fourth between tag fonts too. Joe maurath has some 100W MV M-250R2s from 1989 with both the 70s-80s font and the newer narrow font. The shade of blue seemed to differ too. some were sky blue while others were a little darker. GE had always used a fairly light blue though while ITT/T&B used a really deep blue. I like the color of the deep blue better but it makes the numbers harder to read.
McCann Lighting tags use the deep blue color but I'm thinking of switching to a lighter blue so they can be read a little easier. Probe MH and MV fixtures are still availble to non-USA customers. They're currently an unlisted option, though i may add them back in to the spec sheets... The MV fixtures are merely MH fixtures with MV tags for 175-1000W. 100W MV is not sold because we have a strict policy against selling "modified" equippement. However, a 100W NEMA tag and lamp can be shipped with a 70W PSMH fixture and instructions on how to disable the ignitor to non-USA customers.
Oh and I put in a second order of NEMA tags on Saturday with some small changes. I changed the corners so that they are square instead of rounded like the first set and I also crammed in some 1" tags in the white space between the three 3" tags. The colour stayed the same though.
this would work for any NEMA tags. It's weatherproof gloss white for ink jet printers. they have the same thing in laser if you have one of those...
this one is gold foil for ink jet printers. it's not mentioned as weatherproof so I guess something like clear enamel spraypaint could be applied if you want to ensure weather resistance.
there's silver too. that could be useful when copying Westie and Cooper/Crouse-Hinds NEMA tags since both the HPS and MV tags were foil. When Mass electric used FCO T&B 313s in 100 MV (not a cataloged item), the lights had foil tags with a narrow boldface font similar to "Impact". I got a picture of one when i went to Joe's in July.
I've also since cut out the other tags and I used the 17 MV one on my yardblaster. It looks more like a real NEMA head with the tag on it.
Oh and do you know if the labels you linked to have a paper or plastic backing, I know some foil labels that are for envelopes and have a paper backing under the foil. The ones I made were vinyl, so it's just like a real NEMA tag .(/gloat )
I'm not sure if it's a paper backing or not. They have a vinyl version they sell too...
I like the vinyl versions because they would last a lot longer if you use them outdoors compared to ones with a paper backing. I think the real foil NEMA tags used mylar backings.