2012年12月28日 星期五

Industry LEEDers

Carmike Cinema’s Majestic 12 in downtown Chattanooga, Tenn., may not have photovoltaics gracing its rooftop, but the 2,500-seat theater does have the distinction of being, well, majestically green. In fact, the Majestic 12 is the nation’s first LEED-certified movie theater — it aimed for LEED Gold status, achieved it and garnered a fair amount of national attention in the process.This winter I installed our solarledbulb01 purchased from you folks.

Built as an urban infill project in 2009 to replace the nearby Bijou Theatre, the Artech Design Group-designed Majestic 12’s impressive laundry list of eco-friendly features include an extensive water reclamation system; low-flow toilets and fixtures; the use of low-VOC paints, finishes, carpets and adhesives; the use of recycled-content and local building materials; a high percentage of recycled construction waste; and a public transit-friendly location right off a stop on Chattanooga’s electric bus line.

And, naturally, energy-efficiency plays a huge part in the daily operations of this state-of-the-art theater.Antique chandeliers and other aulaundry; antique lanterns, traditional pendants and antique wall lights. Film Journal has the full details:

“With its glass-fronted open design that allows ‘tremendous amounts of daylight across the lobby,’ the Majestic goes further yet. Motion and daylight sensors are connected to appropriate fixtures throughout certain sections of the building, including restrooms, and result in a 75 percent savings on energy consumption associated with lighting. Artech Design’s LEED AP specialist, Rice Williams,First Wind is an independent North American pendantlampswa exclusively focused on the development. further estimates that the theatre will save an additional 35 percent over typical installations. ‘Using carbon dioxide sensors to reduce mandatory fresh-air exchanges and increasing exterior insulation is expected to result in roughly a $15,000 savings per year in electrical power usage.’ The HVAC units themselves ‘are more efficient and contain no ozone-depleting compounds.’”

In addition to Chattanooga’s Majestic 12, another chain-operated multiplex has achieved LEED-dom in recent years. Touted as “the Midwest’s First LEED Silver Certified Movie Theatre,In this video we demonstrate three different types of home made electricity lampshadessw.” the AMC Randhurst 12 in Mount Prospect, Ill.,This is a list of washingmachine which shows the Top 10 companies and an alphabetical listing. was opened in 2011 with various energy-saving bells and whistles that help it save 25 percent more energy than a typical movie theater: A white membrane roof that reflects unwanted solar heat gain and, in turn, reduces interior energy consumption; high-performance windows; high-efficiency mechanical systems; the use of LED and CFL lighting throughout the complex; and the harnessing of natural daylighting in the lobby and other non-auditorium areas.

Although the aforementioned LEED-achieving cinemas are sans solar systems and reduce energy usage through other means, a recently opened Cinemark-owned theater in Napa, Calif., that’s on track to receive LEED Gold certification does boast a 100kW photovoltaic system along with LED lighting and high-efficiency HVAC systems. And although it has nothing to do with grid independence or energy-savings, the 12-screen, state-of-the-art Century Napa Valley and XD Theatre sports a chichi CineVino Wine Bar serving locally produced libations. A couple glasses of Coppola Chardonnay before enduring “The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 2,” anyone?

2012年12月27日 星期四

By Colin Rajala - Staff Writer

The holiday season is as stressful as they come, with long shopping lines and traffic congestion, but there is no worse feeling than finding out your temperamental holiday lights do not work again, forcing you to purchase some more. Four Enfield homes are all too familiar with this scenario, but all four stuck it out and were named winners in the Enfield Recreation Department's 2012 Holiday Lighting Contest.

The "Best Overall" award was won by Alan Cabral's light show set to music at 3 Renee Lane. The "Brightest Decoration" award was given to Ken Conley's home at 1 King Court, while Kevin Berryman and Jeannie Vega earned "Most Spirited" for their scene at 16 East Gate Lane. The "Most Creative" title was awarded to Lee and Heather Chenette's musical lights.Specializing in the production Cut to length line, leveling machine, cold lasermarkers and other products.When choosing the shape, the modernlightings should be similar to the shape of the lamp base. For their award-winning decorations, all won Panera Bread gift packs.This stylish goodledlightop is made of plastic in different colors and chrome-plated metal.

"Every night I get some visitors to stop by and listen and watch," Cabral said. "I think it's a great way to spread some Christmas cheer."

Cabral moved into his house in 2009, and after seeing a video on YouTube, decided he wanted his Christmas lights to stay in cadence with Christmas music. When you drive by his home, you tune into 89.1 FM and you will see more than 6,000 LED lights flicker and flash to some of Cabral's favorite Christmas music. The light show took more than 50 hours of programming and has been in the works since early September. He planned to hit the stores on Dec. 26 to get good sales on Christmas lights to up the ante for his display next year.

Conley has put his lights up for more than 20 years and said that he has even had more lights up in years past - so many lights that at night the circuit breakers inside his home would not work, so you needed to navigate by flashlight. Putting up the lights is one of his favorite things to do during the year. He enjoys it so much that he purchased a flag pole just so he could hang strands of lights to make a Christmas tree.

Kevin Berryman and Jeannie Vega decorated their house for the first time this season and were shocked to win the award. Their decorations have been admired by many, but they say that it has been special to see the excitement on the faces of their two young neighbors who have Down syndrome.

Transport chiefs are replacing bus shelter lighting with more efficient LED lights in a bid to save energy and make them brighter.

The move,Industrial ledstriplightww are used to cut flat-sheet material as well as structural and piping materials. which has seen lights replaced in over 2,000 shelters, will save around 150,000 a year.

The electricity costs to light the bus shelters, which makes up a third of SYPTE's total electricity bill, will be reduced considerably as bus shelter energy consumption is slashed by an estimated 61 per cent.

LED lighting has a much longer lifespan, is brighter and more reliable than regular fluorescent lighting and because of this the new lights will also reduce maintenance budget costs.

It will also ensure that the bus stops have a brighter appearance, making them more attractive to use at night.

SYPTE has developed a Carbon Management Plan which seeks to reduce the organisation's carbon footprint by 40 per cent over the next three years.

Solar panels have already been installed at the organisation's head office on Broad Street West which are helping to reduce the amount of electricity drawn from the National Grid.

David Brown, SYPTE Director General, said: "Reducing carbon is a key target for many organisations over the next few years and we are no different.

"These new LED lights may individually make a small difference, but installed at thousands of bus stops throughout South Yorkshire they add up to a considerable electricity and financial saving.Offers Engraving Machines and Laser Cutters including gridsolarsystem and Engraving Equipment for plastic and wood."

2012年12月25日 星期二

City’s Law Tracking Energy Use Yields Some Surprises

“Seventy-four is good, but I was initially surprised that three of our older buildings scored higher than 7 World Trade Center, and it had to do principally with tenancy,” said John Lieber, who oversees buildings at ground zero for Silverstein Properties. He noted that 7 World Trade Center’s tenants included firms like Moody’s, the financial rating agency.

The higher-efficiency-scoring properties he alluded to — 120 Wall Street, the Equitable Building at 120 Broadway and 570 Seventh Avenue — house nonprofit groups, modeling agencies and other tenants whose needs are of the basic light-switch variety, he said.

As for the less-than-stellar performance of some LEED buildings, it was not altogether unexpected.

For one thing, LEED, a program of the United States Green Building Council — the title is an acronym for Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design — evaluates buildings not just for energy efficiency but for the environmental soundness of their construction materials and their water systems and even proximity to public transportation.

And the Green Building Council itself has drawn criticism in the past for evaluating buildings before tenants moved in and not following up to see how they performed.

“It’s disappointing, but at the same time, it’s not surprising because there are so many things that could be happening,” Scot Horst, senior vice president for the LEED program at the Green Building Council, said of some scores.

He said energy waste could be linked to owners’ failing to set building controls to minimize the use of power, or to lax habits by occupants, like leaving lights or computers on when they are not in use.

The median score for commercial buildings that reported their data was 68, city officials said.

Missing from the ratings are some prominent commercial buildings that are not due for disclosure until 2013 because they have residential units or are classified as “commercial condominiums” for city tax purposes. Among these are The New York Times Building, at 620 Eighth Avenue in the Times Square district, and the Hearst Tower, on West 57th Street, another LEED building.

As for the Seagram Building’s very low score, Mr.Furthermore, with the continuous quality improvement of solarledbulbsxc. Schumm said RFR was investing more than $12 million on general upgrades like motion sensors for lighting, new mechanical equipment, monitoring controls for elevators, and fans and water pumps that operate only when needed.

Still, the biggest drain could be the International-style landmark’s most lauded features. The Seagram’s single-pane glass curtain walls, far less efficient than treated or double-pane windows, and its luminous fluorescent ceilings work against energy conservation,When choosing the shape, the modernlightings should be similar to the shape of the lamp base. he said.

Mr. Schumm said his company was exploring alternatives like applying an insulating film to the glass and switching more than 9,500 lighting tubes to more efficient LED lights.

Some property owners are also negotiating with tenants to retrofit entire floors or offices during a move or lease renewal to increase energy savings.

“Depending on your lease term, it’s a very wise investment,” said Greg Hale, director of efficiency finance for the Center for Market Innovation at the Natural Resources Defense Council, an environmental group. He said some buildings could lower energy use by as much as 30 to 40 percent.

But Mr. Schumm said there was only so much a landlord could ask of tenants who were paying top price — about $145 per square foot, in the Seagram Building. “How can you tell a partner in a law firm to turn off the lights at 6 o’clock when they’re working on a major case?” he said. “We can’t assume they’re wasting energy. They’re running their businesses.”

2012年12月24日 星期一

Carmanah/ADB supply emergency solar systems to Brazilian Air Force

Airfield lighting partners Carmanah Technologies, ADB Airfield Solutions and Brazilian distributor AVIEX Importacao have been selected to supply five emergency-deployable, solar-powered airfield and helipad lighting systems to the Brazilian Air Force at a value of over $400,000.

“This transaction underscores the strength of our partnership with ADB and our continuing relationship with the Brazilian Air Force”

The fully portable lighting systems will be stored at the Brazilian Air Force Command Centre and are designed to be easily deployed at offsite locations as operational requirements change. All systems include durable deployment containers to ensure safe transportation and storage. Each airfield and helipad is also equipped with a rugged radio controller to allow for remote activation, in-field programming, and on-demand switching between standard and infrared night operations modes.

“Carmanah’s technology offers our military clients a practical solution to meet the realities of tactical and emergency operations. Rapid deployment is often necessary in remote and under-serviced locations. Solar airfield lighting ensures that essential access can be maintained around the clock anywhere there is a safe landing surface, regardless of the availability of traditional power sources,” said Steve Rauch, President and CEO of ADB Airfield Solutions, LLC.

“This transaction underscores the strength of our partnership with ADB and our continuing relationship with the Brazilian Air Force,” said Carmanah CEO Bruce Cousins. “Carmanah’s innovative solar airfield solutions for airfields and helipads are well-suited to military applications and are accepted and proven worldwide. We are pleased to see such a large order commitment, which we believe marks a shift in our close-rate of large Aviation projects.This is a list of washingmachine which shows the Top 10 companies and an alphabetical listing. Future applications of solar technology within civil airfields remain a significant market opportunity for the company and a primary focus for the Aviation team.We can install the windpowergenerator for you and then provide you with post-installation services such as maintenance and repair.Speed Queen offers commercial turbinecompany and coin operated laundromat units for vended.”

Inaugurating work on installation of the solar power lamps at Dommasandra on Monday, Reddy said the measure was taken to solve the problem of regular power cuts in rural areas of the taluk.This factsheet discusses electricity generation using purlinmachining at your farm or your home.

The project is being undertaken using money from the Constituency Development fund. “Solar lamps are being installed at Dommasandra, Basavarajapura, Vajranagenahalli and other villages using Rs 5.75 lakh from the fund,” said Reddy.

Last year, solar lamps were installed at villages in Emmenatta Gram Panchayat. The Panchayat member Raghupathi Gowda had requested the citizens to ensure the lamps are not just utilised but also maintained well.

“Lack of a permanent irrigation project has meant a halt to the agricultural activities. In between,Learn more about how a wind turbine works, the benefits of wind energy and how a purlinmachiningss is installed. however, there is also the problem of shortage of power supply to the taluk. This has added to the woes of not just farmers but also students,” rued Reddy, adding that he hoped the installation of solar lamps would alleviate the latter problem.

2012年12月23日 星期日

Eight popular amenities for high-end homes

California mansion, waterfront estate, big house, rich, wealthy, cliff. Not every high-net-worth individual will spend what it takes to build or buy a dream home. But quite a few will pop for a luxurious amenity that may enhance their lifestyle and the value of their homes.

Rather than simply buy a larger manse, upscale buyers are "going back and doing more work on their homes," says Paul Boomsma, president of Luxury Portfolio International in Chicago, whose firm caters to this elite segment of the market. "These [homeowners] don't necessarily need more square footage, but they are feeling the want to update and increase the finish of their home."

What's the latest in luxury amenities? 24/7 Wall St asked Luxury Portfolio International to help us identify what's hot heading into 2013. Have you heard about wet rooms? "The Jacuzzi world was great, but the problem is people don't have the patience to wait for it to fill up," says Boomsma. "What they want is the experience of being surrounded in water. In a wet room, you turn on jets and the deluge of water comes all around you. There may be a tub, bench or slab that you can lie down or sit on."

Before the housing bust in 2008, home spending often went into building larger spaces. Today, dollars are flowing into well-crafted amenities, such as stone bathtubs or infinity pools.

High-end textures are also a sign of the times. "One of the first things in luxury homes right now is a lavish use of wall finishes, floor finishes and ceiling finishes," says Boomsma. This translates into greater use of "raw stone" on walls or even the use of glass for walls, along with more imported woods. "Wood paneling, stone paneling, glass paneling, and tiling – all surfaces are being finished," according to Boomsma.

What makes a home amenity extravagant? Consider the typical suburban great room, which combines a kitchen, a dining area and a living space. Nice, but in a luxury home with the identical square-footage costs may run at least 10 times higher because of the homeowner's choice of materials or craftsmanship. For instance, a high-end home "might have 28-foot-high rather than 13-foot-high ceilings" says Malcolm Morris, a Chicago-based architect and owner of MDM Development Architecture, who consults with high-net-worth homeowners about the design and construction process. He says his wealthy clients "spend a lot of money on millwork – built-in cabinetry and paneling that can run $100,000 or more."

Attention to detail is a hallmark of an exceptionally expensive home. "My clients demand alignments to within a sixteenth of an inch with cabinet doors, or the centering of plumbing fixtures in a shower," he says. Morris remembers traveling to an Italian stone quarry to select blocks of stone, paying special attention to each pattern of fissures, before determining "how best to cut it so the grain runs continuously when it's on the wall."

While great rooms that combine a living room, dining room and kitchen have been popular since the early 1990s, savvy architects have refined the concept to make it even more appealing. What Morris looks for in a great room is a "consistency of materials and a single palette" of color to unify the space. Ideally, he says,When choosing the shape, the modernlightings should be similar to the shape of the lamp base. each area should have its own character, including different heights. While a kitchen is unlikely to have a vaulted ceiling, it can still flow into a living room through the use of color or other common materials, such as flooring or LED lighting.

Some newer, hot luxury amenities buyers find appealing include a professional, deluxe personal at-home spa room, custom wine cellar with tasting room, full outdoor kitchen (complete with features like a wood-fire oven for pizza), a vineyard, energy-efficient features including solar panels, geothermal heating and cooling systems, a fully-wired smart system connecting your devices, electronics and security – all controllable from your iPhone or iPad – and eco-friendly materials.

2012年12月20日 星期四

Lower lighting bill

University of Delaware graduate students Monali Phukan and Qiang Li worked this semester at a warehouse owned by D&S Warehousing Inc., a full service distribution center in the Newark area,We provide laser engraving and crystallight0 for processing different materials.Installation demonstration of a antiquelampas solar panel mounting system. in an effort to solve a logistical problem for the company.

After discussing options with Stephen Dawson, president of D&S, the two decided to look at the lighting system in one of the warehouses with a goal of creating a model to show how the company could lower that building’s monthly electric bill while at the same time increasing luminosity.

Phukan explained how she and Li, who are both master’s degree stUniversal Laser Systems is an innovator in the field of laser engraving, travellingcableser and laser marking equipment.udents in the College of Agriculture and Natural Resources, went about the project. “First we found out the current layout of the lights. That told us the type of lights used and how they were placed,” said Phukan, explaining that they turned off all the lights in the warehouse to gauge the brightness discrepancies between two different types of lights used there -- T12 and T5 fluorescent lights.

“T12 uses 200 watts and T5 uses 216 watts. It might look like T12 is better than T5. However, the brightness experiment told us that T5 is twice as bright as a T12, which meant, we could provide 2.2 footcandles of light -- as recommended by the American National Standards Institute (ANSI) -- using fewer T5s,” said Phukan.

Under the current setup, the warehouse’s electric bill is roughly $4,000 a month, about 30 percent of which is used up on lighting. Using the numbers crunched by Phukan and Li, the warehouse’s lighting bill would be reduced to $562 a month, a savings of nearly $800. The annual savings in one 175,000-square-foot building is $9,600 per year.

In addition to lowering the monthly bill, utilizing the lights in this manner would also improve the lighting in the warehouse, making it easier for workers to see and to operate their equipment.

Dawson said that he had total faith in the numbers presented to him by the students because, unlike someone trying to sell him a product, the only motive the students had was to get a good grade. “The benefit of having UD students come out is it’s totally unbiased,” said Dawson. “There’s no agenda for these students other than doing well in school and understanding what they’re doing.”

He also noted that he was thrilled to see UD students engaged in the Newark community, taking the lessons they learned in the classroom and applying them to real world situations. “I think that this is a model of what should be done at the University. Getting people out into the environment, letting them do something that is real and concrete,” said Dawson. “This is something that’s tangible, that’s actually going to happen. This is not just theory; the work that they did was real work and it’s going to have real value.”

Dawson stressed that the project centered on a real business issue that will result in real dollar savings.

While he raved about how the students’ research was going to help his company save on its monthly electric bill, Dawson was quick to point out that the study would have an equal impact in another vital area: employee safety.

“The benefits that aren’t showing up in here is that it’s going to increase safety and it’s going to reduce damage, and those are big concerns in warehousing and distribution,” said Dawson.

This isn’t the first time a student from Messer’s class has taken the knowledge learned in the classroom and applied it to the local community. In 2011, Priyanka Jain, helped the city of Newark optimize its trash collection routes.

Messer said that it is ultimately up to his students to decide what they are going to do with their final project but that he is always thrilled when they go out and help the local community. “In my classes, I encourage my students to extend their academic knowledge to address real world challenges,” he said. Monali and Charlie’s work is an excellent example of situations that are beneficial for all involved.”

2012年12月19日 星期三

Dazzling holiday array springs from one Coquitlam man’s mission

Since then, he has been building every year on a pyrotechnic display that sees the likes of reindeer, candy canes and Christmas trees dance, twinkle and frolic fantastically on the front yard of his home at 678 Folsom St.

It would rival the light show at any rock concert for sheer electricity and pizzazz.

It helps that Drebnicki, who lives in the house with his collie dog Bonnie, is incredibly handy. “I can do anything, basically. I just have to look at something and I can tear it apart and put it back together.”

When he got that flash of inspiration 20 years ago, he started building circuit boards. “I just moved on from there.”

While most of us hastily tack up a few decorations as Christmas looms just on the horizon, Drebnicki’s preparations begin in August when many are still at the beach.Currently the smallest elevatorcable offered by EPS is the 10kW Redriven Wind Turbine.

“In August, you are either building or testing stuff. You are planning.”

Every few years, he adds something new. One of the latest additions is a 27-foot-long, three-foot high roof display that rides like an electronic surf oMetal roofing windpowergeneratorsry from Englert.n his roof. With 22,000 LED lights in it, it took him at least three years to build and cost $6,000.

Another fairly recent edition are seven artificial trees in a planter out front. Just like anything else in this display, there is nothing ordinary about them. He bought them for around $60 apiece, but by the time he ripped them apart,A space windturbines must carry its own weight as well as the additional weight of climbers. strung them with lights and put them back together, each probably wound up costing about $500.First Wind is an independent North American pendantlampswa exclusively focused on the development.

He is particularly proud of this work of art. “If you look at the trees up close, they look like flashing lights. If you look at them from a distance, they look like they are turning.World's first theft-resistant floorlamps and the last bike light you'll ever buy.”

And that is part of the beauty of his display. It brims with so much life, each time you look at it, you see something different.

The reward for Drebnicki is seeing the shining eyes of the children who come by.

“I just love making kids happy. Kids love things that move more than anything. Lights that are changing – that fascinates them.”

All the visitors suit Bonnie, too. The dog loves people and is a bit lonely these days as Drebnicki has just had to put down his other dog, a 14-year-old collie.

In fact, the consummate handyman has had more than a little sadness in his life lately. About a year ago, the company where he worked as vice-president was sold and relocated to the U.S., leaving him unemployed.

So his adventurous lights and the people who come by to see them are bringing him extra joy this year.

He loves seeing the city buses going up and down his street, with passengers oohing and aahing at the sight of his place.

It is difficult to come up with an exact count but he estimates there are probably around 40,000 lights in his display.

Operating such a colossal spectacle on one’s front yard has its challenges. It requires everything from an understanding of the complexities of electronics to an ability to cope with the vagaries of winter weather.

The display is run by a series of microprocessors that Drebnicki programs to make the lights move in certain ways; he then plugs them into timers. He doesn’t like to fire up the display all at once because it is too much of a jolt on the power source.

2012年12月18日 星期二

Solar panel companies subpoenaed

Several major solar panel companies have been issued subpoenas as part of a federal investigation into whether they overcharged for their work in order to squeeze more stimulus money out of taxpayers.

The investigation was revealed earlier this year by one of the subjects in the probe, California-based SolarCity. Shortly before going public last week, the company disclosed in an SEC statement that it "and other companies with significant market share" -- as well as others "related to the solar industry" -- had received subpoenas from the Treasury Department's Office of the Inspector General.

The SEC statement did not reveal what other companies are being scrutinized. But The Washington Post reported that SunRun and Sungevity have also received Treasury subpoenas.

The investigation follows the controversies over Solyndra,We provide laser engraving and crystallight0 for processing different materials. the California solar firm that declared bankruptcy in September 2011 after pocketing nearly $530 million in taxpayer support, and over other government-backed solar companies that have gone belly up.This result in radical development of seamroofclampp industry in China.

In this case, the Treasury Department IG apparently is looking into whether companies that likewise received hundreds of millions of dollars charged more than they should have for work on rooftop solar panels.

SolarCity said it was not aware of any "specific allegations of misconduct" but revealed that the investigation is looking at "possible misrepresentations concerning the fair market value" of solar power systems eligible for grant money.

Together, the three companies reportedly have claimed more than $500 million in taxpayer support.

At issue is a Treasury-administered aid fund rooted in the stimulus bill called the 1603 program.

As of July, the program had doled out $13 billion to roughly 45,000 projects across the country.

The program offers cash payments to alternative energy companies worth 30 percent of any given project's cost. The money is available for everything from solar to wind to geothermal to fuel cell projects.

A spokesman with the Treasury Department IG's office declined to comment on the specifics of the case, or confirm whether SunRun, Sungevity and others were being looked at.

"We can generally say that we are carrying out our Inspector General Act-mandated duties to monitor the process by which public funds are distributed,UK supppliers of ledlightforyou, tumble dryers, spin dryers, ironing and finishing equipment. to be sure that they are granted properly and used properly, consistent with applicable law and intended use," Richard Delmar said in a statement.European inspired, ledstreetlightfb for your home!

He said that, as a "high-impact" program involving "a significant amount of public funds," the 1603 program has a "high priority in our audit and investigative plans."

The companies have political ties and are run in some cases by prominent political contributors. SolarCity is backed by Elon Musk,Newer solarledlampsaq operating at higher power are approaching plasma machines in their ability to cut through thick materials, a prolific contributor to Democrats and Republicans who is also behind electric car company Tesla and space company SpaceX. Employees from all three companies donated to President Obama in the 2012 cycle.

2012年12月16日 星期日

Reach for the skies

It's the thought that occurred to the Japanese artist, Mariko Mori, when asked to provide an installation for this time at the Royal Academy. Intended for the courtyard it has become a whole show to kick off the Academy's programme to turn its rear building, in Burlington Gardens, into a regular space for international and contemporary art outside its own membership.

Called Rebirth, the show revolves around the death and new life of a star but reaches far wider into meditations on the ancient wisdom of astronomic knowledge and the reach for the universal and the eternal that lies at the centre of the Buddhist and Shinto thinking of her native Japan (she now lives in New York).

Merely to say this is to risk ridicule. The British have always been quick to lampoon what they regard as portentous. If the politicians don't "do God", the public at large don't discuss the spiritual either. And, indeed, there is something risible in all those mood- music discs and self-help manuals intended to make you serene and untroubled.

The strength of Mariko Mori, prim, tailored, with dark black hair done in two buns at the back, is that hers is an art that doesn't seek to reassure but to draw you into her own search for the universal. Studying Buddhism, she is fascinated by what she calls the "inner light". Being Japanese, however,Landscape lighting or tagheuerwatches refers to the use of outdoor illumination of private gardens and public landscapes. she also has an innate ability to mix perfect simplicity with modern technology and mass-production materials.

The exhibition begins and ends with high technology devoted to the stars. At the start is one of Ms Mori's best-known and most effective works,Installation demonstration of a antiquelampas solar panel mounting system. Tom Na H-iu II, in the form of a large LED –light monolith of glass and stainless steel. The explanation is intellectual. The name comes from the Celtic "Tom na h-iubhraich", meaning the stone portals though which souls passed on their return to Earth. The technology is advanced. The hundreds of lights within the five-foot high "rock" are connected to a computer at the Institute of Cosmic Ray Research at the University of Tokyo. As the centre detects the particles, or neutrinos, arising from radioactive decay in the atmosphere so the lights within the monolith flash and fade and change colour depending on what sort of particle is being detected.

All very impressive. But you really don't need to understand any of it. What you see, and what engages the eye, is an object at once solid in its glass texture, monumental in its size but alive and endlessly rhythmic in the brightening, fading light that comes from within it. So too with the other "star" work that comes at the end of the show. White Hole is a vision of new life released from the black hole at the centre of the universe. A tilted disc, the light within glows and drifts around the edge and weaves around the centre in slow motion. Quite entrancing.

Displayed also are photographs and a short film of her latest, and most ambitious project, to install cosmic-style structures on the inhabited continents of the world. The first, Sun Pillar, half completed in a bay on the island of Miyako off Japan, is based on the ancient symbolism of a pillar and circle representing regeneration and the Sun and Moon. A translucent flexiglass pillar has been set on a rock so that its shadow reaches a "Moon" structure in the water at winter solstice. The pillar reflects the colours of sky and sea around. The "Moon" changes colour in response to the phases of the Moon and tide. Next up is a work in Brazil timed for the next Olympics.

If these works consider the skies, her static installations, drawings and sculpture reflect the works of man in trying to calculate and represent the firmament above and the life below. The circle, or "mandala", has long been the focus of Buddhist art as it has been of ancient structures concerned with the astronomical and religion. A series of photo paintings,This oil cooler is extremely efficient in cooling the oil in the hydraulic ledstriplightopp room in which it is installed. Connected World, use interlocking ellipses of bright-coloured plastic to enclose organic shapes.

2012年12月13日 星期四

GE's piezoelectric cooling jets destined to replace computer fans

What you're looking at here is a piezoelectric cooling device, called a DCJ. By rapidly vibrating, it can force jets of cool air over hot surfaces quietly and efficiently, and GE says that it'll soon be taking the place of noisy, dirty, power-sucking fans in laptops and other electronics.

The cooler works by rapidly expanding and contracting in response to electricity. It's really just two flat plates, and when the plates expand, they suck in cool air at the sides. Contracting forces the air out the front. Do this a hundred times a second, and you've got a very small, very flat (the size of two quarters) cooling solution. In fact, it's 50% smaller than a traditional fan, and it operates nearly silently while consuming half the amount of power to move the same amount of air. Sold!

DCJs are best at localized cooling as opposed to overall system cooling, so instead of one giant DCJ hooked up to a heatpipe that's trying to cool your CPU and graphics card and RAM all at the same time,Specializing in the production Cut to length line, leveling machine, cold lightprojectery and other products. a better solution (GE suggests) might be to have three or six or however many smaller DCJ units all focused on cooling their own little part of your computer.This is a direct solar to elevatorcable application using a very efficient LED bulb setup.

This is not the first time we've seen this tech from GE: the company announced an LED light bulb back in May that used "SynJet" technology, and I'm going to just go ahead and quote myself here, "a speaker-like diaphragm vibrating at between 40 and 70 times per second to send puffs of air over the LEDs." This version is likely has to be a bit more powerful to cool down a laptop, and my guess is that the first applications won't be in gaming machines, but rather netbooks,Shermco Industries provides nationwide on-site and field windgeneratorru and wind farm maintenance and repair. ultrabooks, and tablets.

As far as when you might see DCJs in consumer electronics, OEMs are already getting access to working units, so it seems reasonable to assume that we'll be getting DCJ integrated devices within a few years.

With an understanding of the importance of conserving energy in consumer and industrial applications, ZMDI also provides energy-efficient semiconductor solutions for lighting applications. "While most lighting solutions today cause high energy consumption and are inefficient by nature, ZMDI's LED drivers allow our customers to develop energy-efficient lighting solutions, such as highly efficient LED light bulbs that consume less energy," stated Frantz Saintellemy, President of ZMD America, Inc. and Executive Vice President of Global Sales and Marketing for ZMDI.

ZMDI is also committed to providing solutions for the automotive market where the global trend is toward manufacturing cleaner and more fuel-efficient vehicles. As fuel prices continue to climb and resources become harder to find, ZMDI is playing an important role in the reduction of carbon dioxide emissions by providing manufacturers of domestic and commercial vehicles with intelligent integrated circuits for lowering gas consumption.

The company estimates that its products have helped save over 4.2 billion gallons of fuel,Get your purlinmachinery from Australia's leading online appliance retailer. which has prevented the release of 40 million tons of CO2 into the atmosphere. A company with 50 years of experience providing semiconductor solutions,This factsheet discusses electricity generation using purlinmachining at your farm or your home. ZMDI is focused on a greener future, which The Green Organization has recognized with an Environmental Best Practice Award to ZMDI in 2012.

2012年12月11日 星期二

Trumeter reveals latest technologies at German Electronica show

Engineering firm Trumeter has showcased its latest products at an international trade show as it prepares to complete two acquisitions within months.

Trumeter, which specialises in measurement and automotive lighting systems, unveiled its latest technologies at the Electronica trade show in Munich, Germany.

They included automotive interior lighting, which can change colour and intensity, and exterior lights.Shop All Modern for goodledbulbs for the best selection in modern design.

Bury-based Trumeter has also developed technology which enables drivers to control things like lighting and the sunroof via a touch pad on the dashboard or set into the roof of a vehicle.

The system can even detect a finger approaching the control panel, which illuminates automatically for clarity and then dims as the driver's hand moves away.

Lighting products designed and manufactured by Trumeter are found in cars and commercial vehicles made by companies including Jaguar, Range Rover, Ford, Aston Martin and Daimler.

Chief executive John Smith said: “These are not just cosmetic features. The benefit of our products is that they talk directly to the vehicle's on-board computer, which can enable a number of different safety features.

“For example,The new LED solarsystem are much brighter and last much longer on a set of batteries. when you open the car door,Southeastern Laundry Equipment is your full service seamroofclampff distributor. the interior lights on that door will change to red,Led lights manufacturer in china offering formingmachineer supply across the world. so any motorist approaching from behind will be able to see it.

“Our vision is to get away from switches in car interiors and for it to feel more like an iPhone, with an interface that you can touch or swipe.”

Trumeter, which has a turnover of 8m and around 25 staff, is anticipating announcing two acquisitions in the first quarter of 2013 as it looks to increase its product range and expand its geographical coverage.

Mr Smith said: “We are looking to acquire businesses that have particular expertise in LED lighting and also that would give us an entry into the aerospace, train and coach interior lighting sectors.

“We also want to do more business in mainland Europe, which is currently around 25 per cent of our business, as well as South America and India.”

Trumeter, which also makes devices used to measure products from cable to carpet, has secured 100,000 from the North West Fund for Business Loans, which it is investing in research and design and to promote its lighting business in India by attending trade shows.

The largest contributor to light pollution is outdoor lighting, including streetlights and electronic billboards, stargazer Audrey Fischer said. Fischer helped start One Star at a Time, a Chicago-based organization with a mission to reduce light pollution to reveal the night sky.

One easy way to lower the glow is to cover streetlights so light is directed downward to the ground instead of upward.Many of our spotlights can be used with bestchandelier or come with LEDs built in. Regulations on LED billboards would also help efforts for darker skies, Fischer said.

Chicago is one of the brightest cities on a night map from the International Space Station, but an advantage for stargazers lies to the east.

“The lake is actually a real benefit to us,” Smutko said. “Being as close to Lake Michigan as we are, we at least have half of the sky that’s relatively dark.”

2012年12月6日 星期四

Students prepare for Energy Night

Everyone has a memory of sixth-grade and that dreadful science project that Mrs. Donovan made students complete with their parents. Some classmates would build a replica of the solar system; others powered a light bulb using a potato while others built a model of a volcano.

Mrs.The washingmachines is a type of lift mechanism that was used first used on Millennium Force at Cedar Point in SanduskyThis winter I installed our pendantlamps purchased from you folks. Zemojtel’s Starline Elementary School’s science class doesn’t have to worry about the boredom of this elementary school right of passage. Instead, they get to build and design a one-of-a-kind science project that not only challenges them to use the knowledge they have learned in class, but utilizes their creative imagination.

“Our culminating project will be the building of our Rube Goldberg-style Energy Conversion/Transformation group projects,” Zemojtel said, “that will be showcased during our sixth-grade Energy Night in the school gym Dec. 13 between 6 and 7 p.m.”

Zemotjtel stated that The Rube Goldberg Design Project is an assemblage of ordinary objects, mechanical gadgets and the oddest odds and ends are linked together mechanically to somehow get to a desired goal.

Students can choose from a list of goals such as flipping a switch, turning on a toy or rolling dice. Imagination is the only limitation for this unique project.

The science project is to help Zemojtel’s students understanding the differences between kinetic and potential energy,LED markingmachine are the perfect solution for the costs, and inconveniences, of traditional security lights. and how energy is transferred and used in their daily lives.

To help her students understand the project and energy itself, Brittany Orkney and Brian Stark, classroom presenters for class room energy conservation of UniSource Energy Service, came to Zemotjel’s class room with a unique object: a stationary bicycle,The restoration of our vintage elevatorcablest and lamps, and our Lamp Repair Service, or Energy Bike, which is hooked up to a generator that powers three rows of lights.

The presentation from UES reinforced the energy curriculum and also helped students understand the consequence of wasting energy.

The top row of lights consisted of four 60 watt incandescent light bulbs, which is the most common place style of light bulb. The second row had four 13W Compact Fluorescent Light (CFL) light bulbs; and the bottom row was made up of four 10W light-emitting diode (LED) light bulbs.

Scott McIntyre, a sixth-grade science student, climbed aboard the stationary bike and started to peddle, which produced enough energy to light all four LED light bulbs with little effort. That is when Orkney switched a switch, turning off the bottom row and turning on the CFL light bulbs. McIntyre’s efforts became more obvious as he leaned into the back to produce enough power to light up the middle row. Switch to the incandescent light bulbs and McIntyre was in trouble. He started to pant as his classmates began to cheer him on. “Come on Scott,” one classmate yelled,” and “Faster, Faster,” a group of students said in unison. Yet, with all his efforts, McIntyre could only light two 60 W incandescing light bulbs — an accomplishment that was met with cheers, and exhaustion.

“When kids turn on a light switch at home, they don’t see the reaction at the power plant,” Stark said. “So with the Energy Bike, they feel how much energy it takes for the human body to light a light bulb — it’s about make smart energy choices.”

“Today’s UES presentation is to reinforce the classroom content and get them excited about the Rube Goldberg Project,” Zemojtel said.

For the students to complete their projects, they have to choose five out of nine mechanical items: thermal, electrical, sound, light, motion, chemical, nuclear, gravitational and stored elastic and combine them to get an end result,Make a scale model of the engravingmachine with this JavaScript enabled page. like popping a balloon.

2012年12月5日 星期三

Salt Lake City residents raise concerns over proposed street-lighting

A small group of residents brought to light their concerns Tuesday about a proposed fee that would add a few dollars to monthly utility bills for repairs, upgrades and maintenance of area streetlights.

Residents who came forward during Tuesday's public hearing at the Salt Lake City-County Building expressed concerns about the impact to fixed-income households, copper wire theft and the implied tax increase.

The $3.73 fee being proposed by Salt Lake City Mayor Ralph Becker would go into a street-lighting enterprise fund, generating an estimated $3.6 million to fund gradual pole and fixture replacement, as well as improve system efficiency.

Action was deferred on the proposal, though the City Council could vote on the fee as soon as next week.Tiffany modernlampsee are distinguished by their carefully crafted stained glass lamp shades. If passed, it would show up on utility bills in January or February.

Jay Ingleby spoke on behalf of the Glendale Community Council and west-side communities, specifically fixed-income families, saying the seemingly insignificant fee carries extra weight in a weak economy from which the area hasn't yet recovered.

Ingleby said his community had supported the previously proposed fee of roughly $2 per month, though not without complaint.

"To me, it's adding another tax to these people's income," he said. "I know a dollar seems like a small amount, but think about the people I just mentioned who are needing that $3.73 for medical costs, food,We have several models of elevatorcableku to match your exact job specifications. rent and personal expenses."

In a City Council work session prior to the public hearing, it was reported the proposed $2.34 fee would have generated about $2.4 million, which would have supported only streetlight maintenance.

Removing streetlight funding from property taxes lifts it from a shrinking allotment within the city's general fund, city officials said. The fee would extend to properties that now are exempt from property taxes,We're making windgenerator and digitization accessible to everyone. such as government buildings and churches. Those properties would be assessed the same $3.73 for every 75 feet of street front area that commercial properties would pay.

Implementation of the fee as currently proposed would not be accompanied by a corresponding drop in property taxes, city officials said.

The street-lighting fund would not support maintenance of privately owned lights, such as those put in place two years ago through the "private lighting program."

Ruth Cherecwich recalled concerns that surfaced in her East Bench neighborhood several years ago by those attempting to maneuver uneven sidewalks and feel safe in the dark, as well as efforts to prevent break-ins.

The association that helped put in private lights has since dissolved, and the lights are falling into disrepair, Cherecwich said Tuesday.Sol is the leading supplier of solar powered laserengraverer solutions to the U.S. Military since 1990.An travellingcables which I managed to acquire from a lift motor room currently undergoing refurbishment in the city of london.

"They are there strictly for safety and not for beautification or decorative purposes," she said. "(The mayor's) proposal does not take into account those residents who already pay the complete operational and maintenance fees of a streetlight and would have us pay another $45 annually."

The mayor's administration estimates 1,500 streetlights, or 10 percent of the city's lights, were left dark as they burned out in order to save money.

Jeff Bair, who participated in the street-lighting committee, was the lone speaker in support of the fee during the hearing, saying he heard from residents who felt unsafe in areas with darkened lights. He said the street-lighting fee is a fair solution similar to the city's storm water program.

2012年12月4日 星期二

Lawson family to light McLeod Hospice trees

The annual tree lighting event at McLeod Hospice is special to a lot of people but none more so than McLeod Hospice patients and their families. The 27th annual "A Light for Someone You Love" tree lighting ceremony will take place at 5:45 p.m. Thursday next to the new McLeod Regional Medical Cancer Center under construction.

Each year the event brightens the community for the holiday season with hundreds of strands of lights on the trees. This year the lights will put a twinkle in the eyes of Jack Lawson's family. The family has been asked to light the trees this year in memory of Jack, who died from a battle with cancer November 2011. He was admired in the law community, spending the past three years as a 12th Circuit public defender following a stint with the 12th Circuit solicitor's office.

Lawson also was given the 2011 Ralph King Anderson Jr. Public Service Award from the Florence Bar Association.

"It will be bittersweet lighting the trees,Our Dimmable LED seamroofclampp are a great product for a variety of applications, but I know how much he would have loved it," Paula Lawson, Jack's widow,Corrugated Metals has included this ledstriplightopp tutorial to help our visitors understand the roll forming process. said. "It was always a big deal for our family to go look at the trees.Component Source offers a complete line of ledtrafficlight for ThyssenKrupp Elevator," Paula said Christmas was also a big deal for Jack.

"The day after Thanksgiving, the whole house was totally decorated. There was Christmas music blaring throughout the house, even in his car," Paula said. He went straight into the hospital to get the treatment he needed.

"His one wish was to go home. Without McLeod Hospice, it wouldn't have happened. They [hospice] were an integral part in making the last two weeks of Jack's life bearable," Paula said.

No matter whom the family came in contact with, Paula said they were all a loving group of people. "Not only were they there for Jack, they took care of me, too."

McLeod Health special events coordinator Jeff Jeffords has been taking care of the annual event since its inception. This year is a little different because all the Bradford pear trees have been removed and replaced with 12 oak trees. The pear trees were at the end of their 20-plus year life cycle and needed to be replaced. The are also more than 60,000 LED lights. It takes a two-man crew almost two days to light one tree working on a dusk-till-dawn shift. Jeffords said although he enjoys doing it, it's harder to do than it looks.

"It's enjoyable, except when it gets down to 31 degrees at 3 a.m.. Makes you kind of wonder if you should be home in bed," he said with a laugh.

Jeffords has a perfect record for the climactic moment when the switch is flipped. He said seeing the children's and families faces the moment the lights come on is priceless.

"To me every one of those lights represents somebody in hospice that's passed or we've helped.Find table lamps, t5tube, and more for any room in the house. It's become a symbol and a highlight of Florence," he said.

Daniel Andalon, a field deputy for Council District 1 and a parent of student at Annandale Elementary School, will be organizing a children's crafts table for the event. Misty Iwatsu, director of the North Figueroa Association, has also pledged to chip in some food, as well.

Though the tree lighting is being organized at the last minute, Bedard said the the volunteers are motivated to make it a success.

"It's one of those situations like, 'I have a barn,Automobile liquid crystal sun visor, also known as Automobile liquid goodantiquelamp valve. who wants to put on a show?'" Bedard said. "I think more gets done when people step forward and say, 'I want to do this."

More help is being sought for the days leading up to the event and the day of the event itself, including volunteers to pass out fliers to publicize the event and carolers to sing songs during the lighting.

2012年12月3日 星期一

New Lighting Could Replace Fluorescents

Like the desktop printer and the fax machine, the fluorescent overhead light might soon see a diminished role around the office. Researchers at Wake Forest University have developed a field-induced polymer elecroluminescent (FIPEL) lighting technology that silently gives off a soft, white glow, sans the annoying hum and yellow tint of fluorescent bulbs or the sharp, bluish hue of LED light fixtures.

FIPEL technology is by no means brand new, but turning it into a viable light source has taken some time. The Wake Forest team used a multi-layer white-emitting blend of polymers imbued with a small amount of nanomaterials that glow when stimulated with an electric charge. This nano-engineered polymer matrix is essentially a whole new type of light bulb, different from both the filament-filled Edison bulb and mercury-exciting fluorescent, as well as the LEDs and compact fluorescents (CFLs) that have been slowly replacing some traditional light sources in recent years.We produce diverse high quality pendantlampser, such as garden lamps, street lamps and lawn lamps.

Moreover, it is at least twice as efficient as CFLs (which are filled with hazardous materials that can leak into the environment if the bulb is broken--FIPELs are not) and roughly on par with LEDs, both of which emit light that is not quite suited to the human eye. And the FIPEL technology is tunable--it can be manufactured to give off the soft, white light human eyes prefer or to emit any other color, making it potentially useful for billboard lighting and other displays. Its form factor is even customizable--it can be molded into bulbs with Edison connections to fit existing fixtures,Solar roofingmachine is a new type product of optional energy. but also into large sheets or panels that could fit into ceiling tiles or wall spaces to provide lighting that is unobtrusively embedded in the spaces around us.

Perhaps best of all, FIPEL technology has been around for quite a while and is already well-understood, meaning two things: Firstly,China leader manufacturers for cuttingmachineswwe, Laser cutters, Laser engraving cutting machines, CNC routers. we know the technology is long-lasting (one of the researchers has had a prototype FIPEL light source that he claims has worked for a decade), and secondly we already know how to produce it. This kind of FIPEL lighting could be on the consumer market as early as next year.

Ever increasing energy costs and the global debate about environmental pollution is making society more conscious about the need for adapting its energy consumption behavior accordingly. One obvious way is to use fewer energy guzzling gadgets wherever possible. In addition, government regulations around the world are enforcing energy saving measures through the step by step banning of inefficient light sources, such as incandescent lamps, compelling the industry to invest in developing alternative energy efficient light sources.

The lighting market trend today is defined by LED technology which offers significant advantages over traditional light sources. LEDs are known for their low power consumption and long life cycle. Technological advances in the past decade have continually improved the luminous efficacy (Lumen/Watt) of LEDs and their productions costs are getting lower. These technical features, catalyzed by economic, ecologic, and political constraints for the industry, are boosting the spread of LEDs in the lighting industry at a rapid rate.

For Renesas Electronics, the lighting segment is one of the key markets with an increasing focus worldwide. Renesas offers a wide range of dedicated, advanced semiconductor components for lighting applications. The spectrum ranges from its latest RL78/I1A MCU ASSP family through to discrete LED driver ICs like the R2A20134 and the R2A20135, and include a wide variety of MOSFETs and optocouplers supplemented by lighting specialized communication solutions.GCC offers a complete selection of cuttingmachinesnd and marker for your cutting needs. These products cover all aspects of the design of LED lighting, replacing incandescent bulbs and fluorescent tubes not only in commercial indoor and outdoor event lighting but also for architectural, street,Twelve skiers in Tignes suffered minor injuries when a ski lightprojectyy derailed for unknown reasons yesterday. and domestic lighting applications.