The 60-Watt LED Amber Canopy Fixture is designed to replace HID lighting systems from 150w to 250w. This product is compliant in areas close to beaches where Amber environmental lighting codes apply.
The typical commercial applications for this product include:
Retail centers
Industrial parks
Airports
Office buildings
Mounting heights of 9 to 18 feet can be used based on light level and uniformity requirements.
Die Cast Hinged and Gasketed Aluminum Front Frame and Housing with ½” Coin Plugs. Nickel-Plated Stainless Steel Hardware. Photocell Adaptable.
Textured Architectural Bronze Powdercoat Finish Over a Chromate Conversion Coating. Custom Colors Available Upon Request.
Tempered Clear Flat Glass Lens or Tempered Clear Flat Prismatic Glass Lens.
Cast-in Template for Mounting Directly Over a 4˝ Recessed Outlet Box, or Use ½˝ Surface Conduit.
114 LPW, Amber 600NM, Silicone-coated Aluminum Core Boards - Water and Humidity Proof
0W=Array: 60 System Watts: Lumens - 6,840 (150-250W HID or Induction Equivalent.)
Programmable Driver, 120-277V, 50/60Hz; Dimmable Driver.
UL: Listed for Wet Locations. Operating Temperatures: -40°C to + 30°C IP67 Sealed LED Compartment.
For millions of years, female sea turtles have come ashore to lay their eggs on beaches. When the eggs hatched, the hatchling turtles were guided to the ocean.
They were led by an instinct to travel away from the dark silhouettes of the dune vegetation and toward the brightest horizon, which was the light from the sky reflecting off the ocean.
However, many coastal areas have become highly populated, and artificial lights have been added near the beaches. This artificial light deters female sea turtles from nesting and disorients hatchling sea turtles.
Rather than traveling towards the sea, the hatchlings travel inland toward the artificial lights. This causes them to die from dehydration, be preyed upon by fire ants and ghost crabs, or even get run over by cars on the road.
This disorientation from artificial lights has led to thousands of hatchling deaths in the state of Florida each year. It has also created a significant marine turtle conservation problem.
Statewide efforts have gathered information from disorientation reports and have used this to facilitate light management on nesting beaches and to research additional remedies for light-related threats.
Historically, low-pressure sodium-vapor (LPS) lighting has been used to deter sea turtles away from beaches. Since LPS sources are monochromatic, they give poor color rendition and utilize high amounts of energy.
In an effort to convert to LED while maintaining Florida’s guidelines for proper light wavelengths, NASA sought out EnviroLux Energy Systems to develop an Amber LED solution.
This solution would improve the quality of light without harming sea turtle migration and enable the management of thousands of fixtures through a wireless cloud for optimum energy savings.
For the past 28 years, EnviroLux Energy Systems has been a leader in energy-efficient lighting.