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UK diy (uk.d-i-y) For the discussion of all topics related to diy (do-it-yourself) in the UK. All levels of experience and proficency are welcome to join in to ask questions or offer solutions. |
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#1
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Who fits lights to this specification?
I want an outside light that is brighter than the neighbour's. I want it to switch on whenever a car goes past or someone walks by. It must be aimed over the heads of anyone approaching my doorway. Ideally the light should flood into the windows of the houses across the road. |
#2
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"John" wrote in message
2.236... Who fits lights to this specification? I want an outside light that is brighter than the neighbour's. I want it to switch on whenever a car goes past or someone walks by. It must be aimed over the heads of anyone approaching my doorway. Ideally the light should flood into the windows of the houses across the road. Ours comes on and stays on 24/7 if the power goes off for a second and then comes back on (eg when the high-voltage feed to the village fails *yet again*). I have to be alert to the problem, and turn the power to the light off (turn off the lighting circuit MCB, since the lamp appears to be hard-wired with no switch) and then turn it back on after a delay of about 10 seconds. It is a confounded nuisance. The security light is one of several that was fitted to the (pre-owned) house that we bought recently. Fitting a security light which has no isolating switch is bizarre. Equally bizarre is another security light which is wired into the same circuit as a normal switch-controlled outside light (ie without a PIR sensor), so if you want to arm the security light you have to have the other light permanently on. Or else you turn off the normal light and the security light doesn't work. After Christmas I'll dig out our solar-powered security lights from our previous house and set those up in place of the 500W photoflood lights which are a liability (they annoy the neighbours and they gobble up electricity if the PIR fails to turn the light off). |
#3
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On Fri, 29 Nov 2019 17:32:22 GMT
John wrote: Who fits lights to this specification? I want an outside light that is brighter than the neighbour's. I want it to switch on whenever a car goes past or someone walks by. It must be aimed over the heads of anyone approaching my doorway. Ideally the light should flood into the windows of the houses across the road. Sounds like a good place for a mirror. Send back what they send to you. -- Davey. |
#4
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On Friday, 29 November 2019 17:32:25 UTC, John wrote:
Who fits lights to this specification? I want an outside light that is brighter than the neighbour's. I want it to switch on whenever a car goes past or someone walks by. It must be aimed over the heads of anyone approaching my doorway. Ideally the light should flood into the windows of the houses across the road. The builder fitted two outside lights - both sort-of fake half lanterns with PIR. Luckily, they take standard lamps. So I replaced the 60W or 100W ones fitted with something like 2.5 or 3W. Then added two more of the same design to improve coverage. So a total of something like 10 or 12 watts. And it is plenty of light to check the bins, walk safely, see someone coming up the drive. |
#5
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On 29/11/2019 17:32, John wrote:
Who fits lights to this specification? I want an outside light that is brighter than the neighbour's. I want it to switch on whenever a car goes past or someone walks by. It must be aimed over the heads of anyone approaching my doorway. Ideally the light should flood into the windows of the houses across the road. Yup, we've got one of those. To be fair it is only the range that is a problem and it does get triggered by passing cars or pedestrians. The light actually goes pretty well where it is wanted and is of a sensible power. I have to experiment with blocking off part of the sensor yet, to detect along our driveway, but not outside - I'm waiting for a dry night, when I've got a spare half-hour to do it. SteveW |
#6
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On 29/11/2019 17:49, NY wrote:
"John" wrote in message 2.236... Who fits lights to this specification? I want an outside light that is brighter than the neighbour's. I want it to switch on whenever a car goes past or someone walks by. It must be aimed over the heads of anyone approaching my doorway. Ideally the light should flood into the windows of the houses across the road. Ours comes on and stays on 24/7 if the power goes off for a second and then comes back on (eg when the high-voltage feed to the village fails *yet again*). I have to be alert to the problem, and turn the power to the light off (turn off the lighting circuit MCB, since the lamp appears to be hard-wired with no switch) and then turn it back on after a delay of about 10 seconds. It is a confounded nuisance. On the other hand, that is a useful feature for many people. I can switch our front light off and on so as to "lock" it on while I do some work on the car or just look for something in the boot. Similarly, I can do the same with the garage light when I am cutting something outside, in the evening. I specifically looked out for lights with that feature as it is so useful. on the other hand, we very rarely suffer momentary power failures and I can see how it would be a real nuisance there. Maybe they should build in a 12 hour timer to cancel that feature automatically. The security light is one of several that was fitted to the (pre-owned) house that we bought recently. Fitting a security light which has no isolating switch is bizarre. Our garage light didn't have one. I added one specifically so that I could turn off and on to turn it on permanently! Equally bizarre is another security light which is wired into the same circuit as a normal switch-controlled outside light (ie without a PIR sensor), so if you want to arm the security light you have to have the other light permanently on. Or else you turn off the normal light and the security light doesn't work. That is weird! After Christmas I'll dig out our solar-powered security lights from our previous house and set those up in place of the 500W photoflood lights which are a liability (they annoy the neighbours and they gobble up electricity if the PIR fails to turn the light off). Ours are LED and so don't take too much anyway. Plus we don't suffer from intermittent supplies anyway. On the other hand, the trickle charger for the kit-car is annoying, because if we trip the RCD (common-ish due to high leakage of too many computers and peripherals with integral filters), I have to remember that the charger has to be manually reset to resume charging - not so easy if my wife or son has reset the RCD while I am out and I don't even know that it has been off. SteveW |
#7
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On Friday, 29 November 2019 21:57:04 UTC, Steve Walker wrote:
On 29/11/2019 17:32, John wrote: Who fits lights to this specification? I want an outside light that is brighter than the neighbour's. I want it to switch on whenever a car goes past or someone walks by. It must be aimed over the heads of anyone approaching my doorway. Ideally the light should flood into the windows of the houses across the road. Yup, we've got one of those. To be fair it is only the range that is a problem and it does get triggered by passing cars or pedestrians. The light actually goes pretty well where it is wanted and is of a sensible power. I have to experiment with blocking off part of the sensor yet, to detect along our driveway, but not outside - I'm waiting for a dry night, when I've got a spare half-hour to do it. SteveW Our one at the front does come on rather too easily. I too have been thinking about putting some tape on it - or similar. The one at the back is just right - comes on when pussycat gets near but not when she is a bit further away. All four come on easily for humans. So, basically, really happy. I take the outers down each year and give them a good clean. |
#8
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![]() "Steve Walker" wrote in message ... On 29/11/2019 17:49, NY wrote: "John" wrote in message 2.236... Who fits lights to this specification? I want an outside light that is brighter than the neighbour's. I want it to switch on whenever a car goes past or someone walks by. It must be aimed over the heads of anyone approaching my doorway. Ideally the light should flood into the windows of the houses across the road. Ours comes on and stays on 24/7 if the power goes off for a second and then comes back on (eg when the high-voltage feed to the village fails *yet again*). I have to be alert to the problem, and turn the power to the light off (turn off the lighting circuit MCB, since the lamp appears to be hard-wired with no switch) and then turn it back on after a delay of about 10 seconds. It is a confounded nuisance. On the other hand, that is a useful feature for many people. I can switch our front light off and on so as to "lock" it on while I do some work on the car or just look for something in the boot. Similarly, I can do the same with the garage light when I am cutting something outside, in the evening. I specifically looked out for lights with that feature as it is so useful. on the other hand, we very rarely suffer momentary power failures and I can see how it would be a real nuisance there. Maybe they should build in a 12 hour timer to cancel that feature automatically. The Hue external motion sensor and a Hue light will do all that and handles grid glitches fine. Nothing like as cheap tho nut not too much more if you have the Hue system already and are just adding the motion sensor and bulb, particularly with amazon specials. The security light is one of several that was fitted to the (pre-owned) house that we bought recently. Fitting a security light which has no isolating switch is bizarre. Our garage light didn't have one. I added one specifically so that I could turn off and on to turn it on permanently! Equally bizarre is another security light which is wired into the same circuit as a normal switch-controlled outside light (ie without a PIR sensor), so if you want to arm the security light you have to have the other light permanently on. Or else you turn off the normal light and the security light doesn't work. That is weird! After Christmas I'll dig out our solar-powered security lights from our previous house and set those up in place of the 500W photoflood lights which are a liability (they annoy the neighbours and they gobble up electricity if the PIR fails to turn the light off). Ours are LED and so don't take too much anyway. Plus we don't suffer from intermittent supplies anyway. On the other hand, the trickle charger for the kit-car is annoying, because if we trip the RCD (common-ish due to high leakage of too many computers and peripherals with integral filters), I have to remember that the charger has to be manually reset to resume charging - not so easy if my wife or son has reset the RCD while I am out and I don't even know that it has been off. SteveW |
#9
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On Saturday, November 30, 2019 at 6:32:25 AM UTC+13, John wrote:
Who fits lights to this specification? I want an outside light that is brighter than the neighbour's. I want it to switch on whenever a car goes past or someone walks by. It must be aimed over the heads of anyone approaching my doorway. Ideally the light should flood into the windows of the houses across the road. Have you read this? Very amusing. ;-) http://www.27bslash6.com/halogen.html Tim+ |
#10
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That is not a spec for a light its a spec for the dingbat who fits it!
Brian -- ----- -- This newsgroup posting comes to you directly from... The Sofa of Brian Gaff... Blind user, so no pictures please Note this Signature is meaningless.! "John" wrote in message 2.236... Who fits lights to this specification? I want an outside light that is brighter than the neighbour's. I want it to switch on whenever a car goes past or someone walks by. It must be aimed over the heads of anyone approaching my doorway. Ideally the light should flood into the windows of the houses across the road. |
#11
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On Fri, 29 Nov 2019 22:06:52 +0000, Steve Walker wrote:
Ours comes on and stays on 24/7 if the power goes off for a second and then comes back on (eg when the high-voltage feed to the village fails *yet again*). I have to be alert to the problem, and turn the power to the light off (turn off the lighting circuit MCB, since the lamp appears to be hard-wired with no switch) and then turn it back on after a delay of about 10 seconds. It is a confounded nuisance. On the other hand, that is a useful feature for many people. I can switch our front light off and on so as to "lock" it on while I do some work on the car or just look for something in the boot. Similarly, I can do the same with the garage light when I am cutting something outside, in the evening. I specifically looked out for lights with that feature as it is so useful. When I fitted PIRs front and rear I used 2-gang plates, 1 switch via the PIR and 1 that bypasses it. Just have to remeber to turn off the bypass! As I wired it, I'm happy working on the fitting with just the 2 switches off. The lamps are about 9W R63 wide angle pointing downwards, so sorry, I won't be dazzling you! -- Peter. The gods will stay away whilst religions hold sway |
#12
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On Sat, 30 Nov 2019 16:10:57 +1100, cantankerous trolling geezer Rodent
Speed, the auto-contradicting senile sociopath, blabbered, again: The Hue external motion sensor Your Philips Hue again? Shove it up your senile self-important arse, senile Rodent! -- "Anonymous" to trolling senile Rot Speed: "You can **** off as you know less than pig **** you sad little ignorant ****." MID: |
#13
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on 29/11/2019, Steve Walker supposed :
Maybe they should build in a 12 hour timer to cancel that feature automatically. They do - each dark to daylight transition cancels the light remaining on, or at least thats the case with every such light I have come across. |
#14
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On 29/11/2019 22:06, Steve Walker wrote:
On 29/11/2019 17:49, NY wrote: "John" wrote in message 2.236... Who fits lights to this specification? I want an outside light that is brighter than the neighbour's. I want it to switch on whenever a car goes past or someone walks by. It must be aimed over the heads of anyone approaching my doorway. Ideally the light should flood into the windows of the houses across the road. Ours comes on and stays on 24/7 if the power goes off for a second and then comes back on (eg when the high-voltage feed to the village fails *yet again*). I have to be alert to the problem, and turn the power to the light off (turn off the lighting circuit MCB, since the lamp appears to be hard-wired with no switch) and then turn it back on after a delay of about 10 seconds. It is a confounded nuisance. On the other hand, that is a useful feature for many people. I can switch our front light off and on so as to "lock" it on while I do some work on the car or just look for something in the boot. Similarly, I can do the same with the garage light when I am cutting something outside, in the evening. I specifically looked out for lights with that feature as it is so useful. on the other hand, we very rarely suffer momentary power failures and I can see how it would be a real nuisance there. Maybe they should build in a 12 hour timer to cancel that feature automatically. Some versions overcome the problem of brief power failures by requiring the light to be flipped off twice in quick succession to put them on permanently. |
#15
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On 29/11/2019 17:32, John wrote:
Who fits lights to this specification? I want an outside light that is brighter than the neighbour's. I want it to switch on whenever a car goes past or someone walks by. It must be aimed over the heads of anyone approaching my doorway. Ideally the light should flood into the windows of the houses across the road. I'll fit it if someone is paying for it:-) -- Adam |
#16
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On 30/11/2019 10:06, Harry Bloomfield wrote:
on 29/11/2019, Steve Walker supposed : *Maybe they should build in a 12 hour timer to cancel that feature automatically. They do - each dark to daylight transition cancels the light remaining on, or at least thats the case with every such light I have come across. I've nover left one on long enough to find that out and it's not in the instructions for the ones we've got, but it it could well be an undocumented feature. SteveW |
#17
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In article 6,
John wrote: Who fits lights to this specification? I want an outside light that is brighter than the neighbour's. I want it to switch on whenever a car goes past or someone walks by. It must be aimed over the heads of anyone approaching my doorway. Ideally the light should flood into the windows of the houses across the road. Sadly, if you want a super bright one for this job, it will likely be a discharge type, so not come on at full brightness. And not like being switched on and off. Sorry. -- *I am a nobody, and nobody is perfect; therefore I am perfect* Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
#18
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"Mike Clarke" wrote in message
... Ours comes on and stays on 24/7 if the power goes off for a second and then comes back on (eg when the high-voltage feed to the village fails *yet again*). I have to be alert to the problem, and turn the power to the light off (turn off the lighting circuit MCB, since the lamp appears to be hard-wired with no switch) and then turn it back on after a delay of about 10 seconds. It is a confounded nuisance. On the other hand, that is a useful feature for many people. I can switch our front light off and on so as to "lock" it on while I do some work on the car or just look for something in the boot. Similarly, I can do the same with the garage light when I am cutting something outside, in the evening. I specifically looked out for lights with that feature as it is so useful. on the other hand, we very rarely suffer momentary power failures and I can see how it would be a real nuisance there. Maybe they should build in a 12 hour timer to cancel that feature automatically. Some versions overcome the problem of brief power failures by requiring the light to be flipped off twice in quick succession to put them on permanently. With the sort of power cuts we had one night, even that wouldn't have prevented accidental latching of the light. At most I think I counted a run of four off-on in the course of about 5 seconds. Those automatic power-restoring circuit breakers at the substation are a little *too* enthusiastic: it would be better if there was a minimum off time of about 5 seconds to avoid false-triggering. Of course it would be even better if the power company did their job properly and made sure that vegetation was not allowed to grow close to the wires, so it could always be trimmed safely without needing a planned power cut, and certainly not so it get so close that it causes an unplanned one. A large fine to the power company for each and every power outage that a customer experiences would be a good incentive. You tend to expect flaky power when you are in the middle of nowhere, although when we lived in a tin hamlet of two farms and five cottages, I don't think the power went off once in the year we lived there, whereas when we are in a village with about 500 people, about 5 miles from two different market towns, we've had about 10 times when the power has gone off and on in the six months we've lived here (if it happens repeatedly on one day, I count that as a single event). The power company had the cheek to suggest that anyone who had electronic equipment should have it protected by UPS (an admission that power breaks were only to be expected) and that anyone whose equipment got confused by repeated power blips had faulty equipment. My router eventually got confused after an evening of up-down-up-down (the router still logged on but it gave "destination unavailable" when almost any web address was pinged - apart from the ISP's own web site; DNS was working because the address was being resolved to the correct IP address). That was cured by restoring the router to its factory state - I need to remember to re-create the port-forwarding rules so we can see our webcams from outside the LAN. |
#19
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On 29/11/2019 17:49, NY wrote:
"John" wrote in message 2.236... Who fits lights to this specification? I want an outside light that is brighter than the neighbour's. I want it to switch on whenever a car goes past or someone walks by. It must be aimed over the heads of anyone approaching my doorway. Ideally the light should flood into the windows of the houses across the road. Ours comes on and stays on 24/7 if the power goes off for a second and then comes back on (eg when the high-voltage feed to the village fails *yet again*). I have to be alert to the problem, and turn the power to the light off (turn off the lighting circuit MCB, since the lamp appears to be hard-wired with no switch) and then turn it back on after a delay of about 10 seconds. It is a confounded nuisance. The security light is one of several that was fitted to the (pre-owned) house that we bought recently. Fitting a security light which has no isolating switch is bizarre. I now fit DP switches as standard on all outside lights in new builds and rewires so that the neutral is switched. -- Adam |
#20
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![]() "NY" wrote in message ... "Mike Clarke" wrote in message ... Ours comes on and stays on 24/7 if the power goes off for a second and then comes back on (eg when the high-voltage feed to the village fails *yet again*). I have to be alert to the problem, and turn the power to the light off (turn off the lighting circuit MCB, since the lamp appears to be hard-wired with no switch) and then turn it back on after a delay of about 10 seconds. It is a confounded nuisance. On the other hand, that is a useful feature for many people. I can switch our front light off and on so as to "lock" it on while I do some work on the car or just look for something in the boot. Similarly, I can do the same with the garage light when I am cutting something outside, in the evening. I specifically looked out for lights with that feature as it is so useful. on the other hand, we very rarely suffer momentary power failures and I can see how it would be a real nuisance there. Maybe they should build in a 12 hour timer to cancel that feature automatically. Some versions overcome the problem of brief power failures by requiring the light to be flipped off twice in quick succession to put them on permanently. With the sort of power cuts we had one night, even that wouldn't have prevented accidental latching of the light. At most I think I counted a run of four off-on in the course of about 5 seconds. Those automatic power-restoring circuit breakers at the substation are a little *too* enthusiastic: it would be better if there was a minimum off time of about 5 seconds to avoid false-triggering. The Philips Hue system handles those power glitches fine, keeps tract of the current state and restores to that And you can specify that it does something different on the power coming back too. And handles those movement sensor lights much better too, trivial to override and have it on or off as required for unusual situations but still do the movement sensed actions as well. No need to play silly buggers with light switches for the unusual events. Not cheap, but very convenient to use. Of course it would be even better if the power company did their job properly and made sure that vegetation was not allowed to grow close to the wires, so it could always be trimmed safely without needing a planned power cut, Ours do the trimming live, now planned power cuts for that. The only planned power cuts are for pole replacement or the very rare replacement of a transformer. New feed cables to the houses are done live. and certainly not so it get so close that it causes an unplanned one. We don’t see much of that. We do sometimes see it happen in a big storm which ends up with a branch falling on the 11KV lines at the top of the poles and getting across the 240/415 lines further down the pole but that only happens every few decades or so. All the new estates have underground power so that doesn’t happen at all there. A large fine to the power company for each and every power outage that a customer experiences would be a good incentive. Some of ours do get to pay compensation to the customers for the time without power, but with some exceptions like major grid failure like happened in South Australia recently,. You tend to expect flaky power when you are in the middle of nowhere, although when we lived in a tin hamlet of two farms and five cottages, I don't think the power went off once in the year we lived there, We do get that a bit with some farm supplys. Not with the very small villages much tho. whereas when we are in a village with about 500 people, about 5 miles from two different market towns, we've had about 10 times when the power has gone off and on in the six months we've lived here (if it happens repeatedly on one day, I count that as a single event). The power company had the cheek to suggest that anyone who had electronic equipment should have it protected by UPS (an admission that power breaks were only to be expected) and that anyone whose equipment got confused by repeated power blips had faulty equipment. My router eventually got confused after an evening of up-down-up-down (the router still logged on but it gave "destination unavailable" when almost any web address was pinged - apart from the ISP's own web site; DNS was working because the address was being resolved to the correct IP address). That was cured by restoring the router to its factory state - I need to remember to re-create the port-forwarding rules so we can see our webcams from outside the LAN. Its unusual to get one one unplanned outage a hear here. And often no planned outage in a year too. |
#21
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On Sun, 1 Dec 2019 10:12:16 +1100, cantankerous trolling geezer Rodent
Speed, the auto-contradicting senile sociopath, blabbered, again: The Philips Hue system The Philips Hue system? LOL Shove it up your senile arse, senile idiot! -- FredXX to Rot Speed: "You are still an idiot and an embarrassment to your country. No wonder we shipped the likes of you out of the British Isles. Perhaps stupidity and criminality is inherited after all?" Message-ID: |
#22
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Brian Gaff (Sofa 2) wrote:
That is not a spec for a light its a spec for the dingbat who fits it! Brian AUSTRALIA |
#23
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On Saturday, 30 November 2019 05:33:23 UTC, Tim+ wrote:
On Saturday, November 30, 2019 at 6:32:25 AM UTC+13, John wrote: Who fits lights to this specification? I want an outside light that is brighter than the neighbour's. I want it to switch on whenever a car goes past or someone walks by. It must be aimed over the heads of anyone approaching my doorway. Ideally the light should flood into the windows of the houses across the road. Have you read this? Very amusing. ;-) http://www.27bslash6.com/halogen.html Tim+ One of the advantages of having moved house - only very modest external lights. :-) |
#24
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polygonum_on_google wrote in
: On Saturday, 30 November 2019 05:33:23 UTC, Tim+ wrote: On Saturday, November 30, 2019 at 6:32:25 AM UTC+13, John wrote: Who fits lights to this specification? I want an outside light that is brighter than the neighbour's. I want it to switch on whenever a car goes past or someone walks by. It must be aimed over the heads of anyone approaching my doorway. Ideally the light should flood into the windows of the houses across the road. Have you read this? Very amusing. ;-) http://www.27bslash6.com/halogen.html Tim+ One of the advantages of having moved house - only very modest external lights. :-) Do what many seem to do; swap the modest lights for 500watt Eye Burners. |
#25
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On Sun, 01 Dec 2019 21:48:02 GMT, John wrote:
One of the advantages of having moved house - only very modest external lights. :-) Do what many seem to do; swap the modest lights for 500watt Eye Burners. Or more likely these days 20 W LED eye burners that squirt light out approaching 180 degrees and are next to impossible to control the light from. It ought to be made illegal to sell floodlights with more than a 90 degree beam width. -- Cheers Dave. |
#26
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"Dave Liquorice" wrote in
idual.net: On Sun, 01 Dec 2019 21:48:02 GMT, John wrote: One of the advantages of having moved house - only very modest external lights. :-) Do what many seem to do; swap the modest lights for 500watt Eye Burners. Or more likely these days 20 W LED eye burners that squirt light out approaching 180 degrees and are next to impossible to control the light from. It ought to be made illegal to sell floodlights with more than a 90 degree beam width. It would be a good idea. I have one pointing almost 80 derees down to avoid spill beyong my boundary fence. Some sort of "barn door" shutters would belp. Unfortunately I think some people see "lighting up the air" as a benefit. |
#27
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John wrote:
Who fits lights to this specification? I want an outside light that is brighter than the neighbour's. I want it to switch on whenever a car goes past or someone walks by. It must be aimed over the heads of anyone approaching my doorway. Ideally the light should flood into the windows of the houses across the road. The village bitch had one of those at the start of this thread, needed it to see which one of her drug fuelled exes or suppliers was going to paint strip her Range Rover again. Not that she was worried as Daddy always paid for it to be repaired, it has been his money employing solicitors that has kept legal repercussions to a minimum from other antisocial behaviour such as entering neighbouring gardens and cutting down trees etc because they could be seen from her new conservatory. Still the spoilt brat finally found the social isolation and other repercussions of being in a small community where you have antagonised everyone too much , people get back in other ways, cars parked close to your gate, kids not invited to others parties ,people dont make it easy for you to pass on the single track road. Daddies has bought her a new house in a town a few miles away. The people who moved in two days ago seem fine, someone mentioned the annoying light to them and they have already moved it to point straight down. GH |
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