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Dairy
Lighting - There are many opportunities with lighting to save energy and in some cases,
improve the lighting levels in dairy facilities. Many facilities are under lit but with the many types of new
technology lighting, the lighting can be improved while many times not using any additional energy because the
newer lighting technologies provide more light output with less energy. Light maintenance is also reduced with
the new lighting technologies because they also have longer life.
Indoor lighting - Many dairies are still using incandescent bulbs or T-12 Fluorescent lamps
that flick when the cooler weather sets in. In most cases, the lamp of choice today for agricultural
buildings is T-8 fluorescent lamps in water resistant enclosures. These lamps have a temperature
operating range down to 0°F without flickering, output about the same light as the favored T-12
fluorescent lamps but use 20% less electricity and the lamps last 65% longer -- a win-win situation.
Compact fluorescent lamps (CFL) are designed to be a direct replacement for the old faithful incandescent
bulb which is the oldest and least reliable of the lighting technologies. CFLs use 25% of the power of
incandescent lamps and last 6 to 10 times longer. If used in high humidity conditions, they need to be
housed in a sealed fixture like a jelly jar.
Outdoor lighting - Almost every farm has at least one outdoor light - The "Yard Light".
Many of there are175 watt mercury vapor (MV) high intensity discharge (HID) lights. Mercury vapor
lights are the least efficient of the HID type lights. Metal Halide (MH) and High Pressure Sodium
(HPS) HID lights are approximately 2 and 3 times more efficient than a MV lamp. The MV lamps have
poor color rendering characteristics (the ability for the human eye to differentiate colors as
compared to sunlight), about the same as HPS lamps which MH lamps provide very good color rendering.
Replacing the MV yard light with a HPS lamp could reduce your outdoor lighting costs by about 50%.
Yard Light Reflectors - The typical yard light has a refractor that allows light to travel in almost all direction from the fixture. Light that doesn't make it to the ground is lost. Hubbell and GE manufacture reflectors that focus the light emitted by the lamps to the ground which increases the usable light by 47% and makes for good relations with star gazing neighbors.
Half Night Light Controllers - The typical dusk to dawn yard light uses a photo controller to turn the lamp on at dusk and off at dawn. There is a new photo controller available that measures the length of the night and turns the light off the second half of the night when the least amount of activity is usually occurring, saving half of the energy the light would normally use
For more information on lighting refer to UW Extension Bulletin A3784-14: "Energy Efficient Lighting for Agriculture".
If you have information you think would be useful to this site please contact Scott Sanford, Senior Outreach Specialist, University of Wisconsin, sasanford@wisc.edu.
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