It was MV! I know this part of Boston and lots of the old street lights are MV. And I do not think they would make it HPS from MV. And makeing it HPS and not giveing a HPS tag! NO!
OH NO! You revived the M-400R2 MV vs. HPS thread!!!
Was this replaced? If so, if the new light is 250W HPS, then this was likely 400W MV. However, if the new light is 400W HPS, it's likely that this light was also 400W HPS. Then again this light may have been 250W HPS and so is the new one... And they may have repalced the 400W MV with a 400W HPS. NGrid does that sometimes... I guess we'll never know.
BTW, are you SURE you didn't see a cycling HPS lamp David?
Eye makes a special pulse start MV that needs an ignitor to start. Oh and MV can also run using just a ballast, 240-277v reactor ballasts and 120v HX ballast don't require a cap.
As for the HPS, the retrofit lamps only require a HX or reactor MV ballast.
Good choice on image Joe, Apple Bloom IS best pony! Lol.
I honestly have no side on this whatsoever. xD I have no idea what this was, there i no explanation. Let's settle with this: We dunno if this is MV or HPS and there is no telling what it was! You would have to see the label to proove it.
Anyways, yeah Ian's right. We have no way of telling for sure what this is. It sure as hell looks like HPS to me and the 20 or so people between LG and GoL that have looked at this but we'd need to see the label itelf for proove and this thing probably got turned into a cast aluminum waffle by now so...
- The capacitor seems to be connected to its own coil on the ballast (no wire to the socket), making it a Regulated Lag ballast. Those tend to be HPS in general.
- Just under the cap I see a piece of some sort of holding bracket, maybe this used to hold an ignitor.
I don't say the fixture has always been HPS, but it's possible the fixture was retrofitted to HPS, maybe weeks or months before losing parts. Even if David saw the fixture working back in 2005, it was 6 years ago from the moment he pictured it! Just saying here...
Yeah, I guess we can never really say for sure what light source it used but a lot of people on here do have some valid points and logical explanations. But really the evidence in the picture strongly suggests that the light at the point was HPS.
And Vince does offer a valid suggestion about how the light could have be retrofitted from MV remember that NEMA tags might be wrong in that case.
Was this replaced? If so, if the new light is 250W HPS, then this was likely 400W MV. However, if the new light is 400W HPS, it's likely that this light was also 400W HPS. Then again this light may have been 250W HPS and so is the new one... And they may have repalced the 400W MV with a 400W HPS. NGrid does that sometimes... I guess we'll never know.
BTW, are you SURE you didn't see a cycling HPS lamp David?
HPS only needs a ballast.
As for the HPS, the retrofit lamps only require a HX or reactor MV ballast.
I honestly have no side on this whatsoever. xD I have no idea what this was, there i no explanation. Let's settle with this: We dunno if this is MV or HPS and there is no telling what it was! You would have to see the label to proove it.
Anyways, yeah Ian's right. We have no way of telling for sure what this is. It sure as hell looks like HPS to me and the 20 or so people between LG and GoL that have looked at this but we'd need to see the label itelf for proove and this thing probably got turned into a cast aluminum waffle by now so...
- The capacitor seems to be connected to its own coil on the ballast (no wire to the socket), making it a Regulated Lag ballast. Those tend to be HPS in general.
- Just under the cap I see a piece of some sort of holding bracket, maybe this used to hold an ignitor.
I don't say the fixture has always been HPS, but it's possible the fixture was retrofitted to HPS, maybe weeks or months before losing parts. Even if David saw the fixture working back in 2005, it was 6 years ago from the moment he pictured it! Just saying here...
And Vince does offer a valid suggestion about how the light could have be retrofitted from MV remember that NEMA tags might be wrong in that case.