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Tuesday, March 22, 2011

ActiveLED® High Bay Round Light Delivers Performance and Durability

Unlike conventional lighting sources, ActiveLED Lighting experiences no light loss
Austin, TX, March 22, 2011
commercial LED luminaires, announces that after three years of production and
installations, its ActiveLED
testament to its benchmark performance, efficacy and durability. Customers looking to
replace conventional, inefficient and noisy high pressure sodium (HPS) and high-intensity
discharge (HID) lighting for more sustainable, totally quiet lighting in manufacturing plants,
warehouses and other “high bay” facilities have turned to the ActiveLED High Bay Round
Light.
In Hillsboro, Texas, south of Dallas, Ringdale converted 250-watt HPS lights in the Hill
County Men’s Correctional Facility gymnasium to ActiveLED High Bay Round lights. “We
are very impressed with the light quality coming from the ActiveLED fixtures,” said Hill
County Chief Deputy Stephen Girsh. “Unlike the old lights, the ActiveLED fixtures provide a
crisper, more uniform light with softer shadows. We also look forward to passing on the
lower energy costs to our taxpayers.”
The 78-watt ActiveLED High Bay Round Light provides bright, uniform coverage while
saving up to 85% in energy consumption. With the ever-increasing rise in energy costs, the
High Bay Round Light “makes it a better hedge for the future,” said Klaus Bollmann, CEO,
Ringdale.
– Ringdale Inc., a leading U.S. developer and manufacturer of® High Bay Round Light continues to operate at no light loss, a
2
Rated at 90,000 lumen hours (24/7 is 8,760 hours per year), ActiveLED lights are the
longest lasting LED light fixture on the market, which also helps lower maintenance costs.
With the addition of Ringdale’s LightSpace
facility’s utility bill can be further reduced an additional 10-25%.
Another next generation energy efficient feature of the ActiveLED High Bay Round Light is
its “all voltage” (100V…277V) and 48V DC approach. The light can be backed up by a
Ringdale Battery Pack or be driven from a 48V DC power supply. This cannot be done with
conventional lighting technology.
Like all Ringdale luminaires, the ActiveLED High Bay Round Light comes with an industryleading
10-year warranty on its LED device and fixture and 5-year warranty on its power
source.
For more information on ActiveLED Lighting, contact Ringdale in the United States at 512-
288-9080 or in the United Kingdom at +44-1444-871-349.
® Manager™ digital management solution, a
About Ringdale
Ringdale focuses on helping organizations incorporate green savings into their business
environments. Ringdale provides ActiveLED
control and thermal management technology as well as a wide range of secure document
output management, access control and document workflow solutions. Ringdale, Inc. is
based in the United States with offices in the United Kingdom, France, Germany, Japan
and Singapore and is part of the Network Technology PLC Group of Companies. Visit
Ringdale at www.ringdale.com/lighting.
® luminaires with patented, solid-state lighting

Sunday, March 6, 2011

City of Georgetown Municipal Street Light Case Study

SCY 20w LED replaces 100 to 150 HPS Coop Bracket

Ringdale ActiveLED Parking Garage LED fixtures

http://www.ringdale.com/products/st/asp/control.wizmoreinfo/id.754/po.2/en/default.html

Apple Turnovers and ActiveLED™ Are a Good Mix at Brothers Bakery


Marble Falls, Texas  – Brothers Bakery is well-known in and around Central Texas for its treats, but what may not be apparent is how the café is illuminated in a state-of-the-art and environmentally-friendly way.

The owner, Ryan Malamud, recently installed super energy-efficient, mercury-free LED panel lights in the café after learning about them from his frequent customers, Tony Sieli , LED Lighting Consultant and CEO Klaus Bollmann. Sieli and Bollmann are both local to Marble Falls, so they offered the LED lights as an alternative to Malamud’s conventional T-12 fluorescent lights. 

Ringdale, headquartered in Georgetown, Texas, is a leading manufacturer of commercial LED light fixtures for indoor and outdoor use. www.ringdale.com/lighting

Ringdale suggested the 48-watt, 2’ x 4’ Ringdale ActiveLED™ lights to Malamud as a demonstration to other patrons that LED lights are a better light source over conventional fluorescent lights. LED lighting uses far less electricity than fluorescent, incandescent, high-pressure sodium and other conventional light sources and lasts much longer.

“Customers have been very impressed with the LED lights,” Malamud said.  “The bright, yet soothing white light of the LEDs improves the ambiance in the cafe as well as the look of the art hanging on the walls.”
Malamud was changing fluorescent lights every three to six months.  Sieli said the café can expect to save at least 50% in energy and maintenance costs using Ringdale ActiveLED lights.  Now that’s a lot of dough

LED Lighting Market Has Room for Less Fancy


Tom Griffiths - Publisher

August 12, 2010...In a pair of May editorials (Driving down the costs - Part 1 & Part 2) we talked about some of areas where cost will be driven out of LEDs and solid state lighting solutions. In both, we discussed how we might hit price floors that the industry will settle on and simply add features to, similar to how laptop PCs have stubbornly clung to something around a $500 price point as the floor for something fairly full featured. That doesn't mean everyone will head to the low point with their products. There is going to be plenty of room for varying levels of quality and engineering that will reflect as "commercial" versus "consumer" or "feature rich" versus "base model". There will also be examples of products that are thoughtfully designed to be commercial grade, without having to be particularly pretty, for the job they do. How many of us have marveled at the artfullness of the gymnasium lights?... Fair to say 'none'?.
As an example of cost-optimization, we're seeing some interesting examples play out in the virtual aisles of Home Depot. Back in the May/June time frame, Home Depot added an A19/Edison type incandescent replacement under the EcoSmart brand name (their in-house private label brand), courtesy of Lighting Sciences Group. I haven't seen it show up in my local Home Depot yet, but it does show up online as a "40w equivalent" for $19.97. LSG hasn't commented that I know of, but the industry consensus is that we're looking at the same product as their Definity A19 3000K model that puts out about 430 lumens on about 8 watts (54 lumens/watt). Interestingly, while it's priced for less than $20 at Home Depot, it sells for substantially more inside the commercial lighting channels. It looks like a good placeholder product that LSG would presumably plan to cost engineer, and perhaps "feature down" as time passes, while "featuring up" the commercial versions to justify the higher selling price. One can only guess if LSG is making any money on the EcoSmart version, given that Home Depot needs some margin in order to carry the product. Survey says... well, it doesn't seem to be a hard guess. Keep in mind, cell phones are all sold well below cost in order to make it up in service, so as long as your plan includes making money "with the business model" it can all work out.
In another move at Home Depot, Cree has apparently cut a deal to add the giant as a retail channel for their CR6 downlight. The CR6 was announced a bit ago as a cost-optimized approach to compliment their popular LR6 which was the original "good enough for prime time" commercial market entry product acquired as part of the LLF deal. There hasn't been an official announcement yet, but Cree President, Chuck Swoboda, let it be known in their recent earnings conference call that the CR6 would be stocked under the EcoSmart brand, and selling for less than $50. As Chuck said, Cree's goal is to, "...challenge people's addiction to inefficient lighting," and this looks like a good way to move that agenda forward. The product has shown up on Home Depot's website, and according to the statement on the call, it should be in the stores this fall.
Since their conference call, Cree's stock price has been punished for forecasting $270M - $280M in revenues next quarter, when the analysts were averaging a guess of $284M. How dare they... They did turn in a 48 cents a share net (up 400%+ from a year earlier), which came in short of analysts expectations, and they aren't getting much credit for 56 to 59 cents a share forecast beating the 54 analysts say they expected. The stock market is a fickle mistress, no doubt, and one suspects the analysts either didn't hear, or didn't much care about the Home Depot deal. Of course, this is all reported by folks that can miss on their interpretations of "the why" in probably the same way they might make a small goof on "the who" (cached version of "supercomputer maker Cree..."). Oops, that would be C-R-A-Y. Personally, I think it's a jittery market that is looking for excuses to to explain bits of irrationality, or "guilt by association" when it shows up. Cree, LSG, and Nexxus are the only publicly traded LED/SSL fairly pure-plays, so you're never sure what "the street" really thinks they are, and what success is going to look like.
On the other track, regarding "engineered but not fancy", we had a chance to visit a rare local-to-Austin SSL manufacturer named Ringdale. It was an interesting visit, with their facility located in the not-fancy area of nearby Georgetown, right next to the airport, in an unassuming building that is being remodeled with their own solid state lighting and controls. It was difficult to pin down exactly what Ringdale's expertise was ahead of time, as LED lighting is a new avenue for the 30+ year old company. We had the pleasure of spending some dedicated time with Klaus Bollmann, who is CEO and head visionary for the company. Klaus has been "extracting light" from things for a similar 30+ years, going back to days at the epitaxial level with semiconductor lasers. What we saw was some non-glitzy common sense engineering that appears to be backed up by results. A big part of their ActiveLED product line is built around a custom implementation of Nichia die and phosphor that they have packaged (not by Nichia) into a neat 4x9 array that is mounted to their secondary heat sinks with clips that allow the metals to expand and contract without stress as you would find in other bonding approaches (they have the IP on that trick). They have also designed their extrusions that reflect and direct the light to take advantage of the natural imperfections that come any time you have light passing through materials, whether it be lenses or simply air. By harnessing imperfection, they are able to get the light where they want, without having to take "exotic" or "perfect" approaches to get it to do that.
They've also taken a general approach of not eeking out every bit of performance into the smallest package, and lo and behold, the "relaxed" system isn't pressing the envelope of anything. Big, nearly mil-grade capacitors were selected for their highbay's power supply so that getting to rated life wasn't going to need to be a 'hopefully' proposition. How long do lightly-taxed power LEDs run when you keep the junction temps at a sane level? The answer is 'a long time' (ask again after the ActiveLED luminaires been running for 10 years and we'll probably have an even better estimate of how much longer they'll go for). Ringdale also developed their own controls, taking advantage of lessons they learned from years in the printer protocol and networking environments. The wall control is intuitive and simple, with high and low settings, as well as motion sensor timeouts all easy to program, at a price that appears easy to swallow. The control itself typically connects to the fixture nearest the switch (which is usually battery backed-up with nearly a week of runtime), and then the rest of the fixtures wirelessly sync levels with whatever the master has been set to. The controls and back-up side has set them up to take advantage of solar systems, including incorporating an approach that slightly dims the lights as the battery state slowly declines. That results in radically extending the useful amount of light without taking the batteries to the levels than can impact their lifetime.
They've got some artsy products as well, including a nice shiny walkway bollard, but even that uses the same simple building blocks, without having to get fancy. There's always room to bring common sense to the party. www.ringdale.com/lighting 

University of North Texas Health goes with Ringdale ActiveLED

University of North Texas Health Science Center Lights Up Parking 
Garage With LED Fixtures: Reduces Energy Usage by 67% 

 
FORT WORTH, TX – LED Lighting Group (LLG) announces the retrofit of a 
five story parking garage for UNT Health Science Center with LED light 
fixtures. State of the art 52 Watt LED fixtures replaced existing 
fluorescent fixtures, providing an energy efficient sustainable lighting 
solution. 

 
The installation at UNT / HSC of 101 Ringdale LED garage fixtures reduced energy 
consumption by 67% while improving the distribution of light and 
increasing light levels. The project (materials, installation and rebate) will 
payback in less than two years and reduce CO2 emissions by over 1.5 
million pounds over ten years. 

 
"Quality lighting is very important in this garage. LED products have 
reduced energy consumption and improved the safety and ambience of the 
garage," said Robert Short, Project Engineer, University of North Texas 
Health Science Center. "The LLG fixture outperformed other LED fixtures 
which we tested while offering an impressive payback." 

 
“Energy producer rebates and federal tax incentive programs are in place 
to support the replacement of less efficient lighting fixtures with LED.  
These programs have followed the most strict product guidelines 
established for LED product. That holds the LED to a very high standard - a 
point of pride for us. These incentives have helped move LED lighting 
solutions to a mainstream market position which opens a much greener 
lighting alternative to the market.” Said Stephen Thomas, a partner in LED 
Lighting Group. 

 
LED Lighting Group offers lighting products for commercial, industrial and 
manufacturing facilities that save energy and reduce maintenance costs. 
“We offer lighting products that enable users to better control their 
operating costs. A mercury-free product, LED is ideal for an organization’s 
green positioning, and over its long life it is the most economical solution 
for general lighting,” said partner Mark Angle. 

 
LED Lighting Group offers consultation and energy efficient lighting 
solutions for municipalities, school districts and industry.