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Metalux 8 foot slimline
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I was given four of these. This photo shows the non-plunger side I think. I like this design better than the Lithonia slimline I also have. They're from the 90s, when fixtures started to get real cheap, and I can bend (well actually unbend) the channel by hand quite easily. But still totally worth carrying them several blocks by hand, and some issues with testing them all originally. They all work, but I need some (preferably 75w) lamps now!
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@Joe, yeah I would have to agree. Especially nowadays!
@Darren, thanks! Thought of your 4-lamp slimline actually while working on these
This is my favorite wrap type. These look cool too but I haven't seen one in person before. I like injection molded wraps best.
Oddly enough they saved a few of the original louvered lights and moved them to the service corridors and utility rooms. They even retrofitted them to T8 lol. I'll sneak a pic of one the next time I see them leave the door open lol.
Ah here I'm pretty sure they kept the number of lamps the same when they replaced the fixtures. I don't know what the old fixtures looked like (but my history teacher confirmed my suspicions that the lights WERE all replaced a year or two before I came to high school, so I was right next door at the middle school while the conversion was going on. She said she liked the old lights better because they were much dimmer lol.) I still haven't figured out what the old lights looked like though. I'm thinking that they could have already mass-replaced the lights before, maybe replacing the original fixtures with rapid start wraps in the 70s or something. The building was built in sections and I doubt the original lighting from the 50s was kept all the way up until a few years ago. Maybe the smaller janitor closets kept the original fixtures, but now every single nook and cranny has a new Lithonia wrap light. (I've even peeked inside some janitor closets and they too have the new Lithonia wraps.)
Some of the wraps here are on vintage downrods too, which is cool. I really wish I knew what kind of fixtures were in use in the school. There's one classroom that has a bunch of soot on one of the I-beams, meaning that there was a ballast EOL between the time the ceiling was whitewashed and the time they replaced the lights.
All the classrooms and hallways in the main building have wrap lights with two lamps per fixture (except the C2 Wing, which has three-lamp troffers). I'll have to draw up some of the different combinations I've seen with the lighting in the main building's classrooms. They're pretty much the same within a given wing but the B1 and B2 wing has fewer lights per room than the A1 and A2 wings (the A1 wing is the original wing to the building)
Also I might add at one point we found a NOS case of Norelco F40CWs and put them in (I know, but they were there and we needed lamps). Kinda funny seeing those in commercial use nowadays!
If there's ever a T8 conversion I will try to score all those Norelcos and PCB ballasts for sure.
And all the Exit signs are still incandescent, too!
The house before this one (The one where we were hearing the whistling sound that turned out to be a Deuce) had Marvin wood-frame double-pane windows from the 70s-80s. Top of the line in their day but IMO they SUCK opposed to modern vinyl ones. (Rot issues in a damp climate)
The house in Atascadero had double-pane double-hung windows with fake mullions embedded between the layers of glass. A couple had fogged up or developed other issues by 2014 when we sold that house.
The exterior doors were nice and solid though, in fact I wonder if they were salvaged from elsewhere...they seemed like a 50s-60s design and quality.
My current house...two exterior doors are homemade and not super weathertight, the two others are Stanley prehung ones which have rotten frames 15+ years later and don't latch...another thing to replace LOL.
I like the old double-hung windows in houses older than, say, 1955-ish. Many people hate them, I love their "wavy" glass and other unique features. They're not all that weathertight, but stick a double pane storm on the outside! Same for old doors and their hardware...I really like those, they'll never be made again!
Are mullions those white strips that divide the window into six (or more) parts? If so, my windows have those too. To he honest, I'd rather have windows without the white strips running across but the feature has grown on me. Almost everyone in my family has those strips too so it's got that "at home" feel to it just because I'm so used to seeing them. The white strips also come in handy when leaving the house and you forget if the windows are open or not. Just a quick look is all you need: if you see white strips all the way to the bottom, the window is shut; if you don't see white strips all the way down then the window is open.
Yeah, they are. LOL you can tell if it's shut I guess LOL.