mjf
Senior Member
As far as foot candles at banking institutions is concerned:
Do you measure level at grade? or higher?
Do you measure level at grade? or higher?
It says in all unobstructed directions from the facility (the ATM, I assume). Unless the ATM and customers are over 30 feet off the ground...
Still interested in what the consensus on here is.
It says in all unobstructed directions from the facility (the ATM, I assume). Unless the ATM and customers are over 30 feet off the ground, illuminance at ground level is within the 30-foot radius bubble.
BTW, post #3 says outdoor while post #4 highlights an indoor requirement.
The specs don't say at what height. Typically when it is regarding overhead lighting, measurements are taken at grade level.
The NYS banking authority doesn't care if it's overhead lighting, side lighting, up lighting or any other lighting we could come up with....as long as the FC are sufficient.
It's become a moot point.....Bank says today........"just add more lights"![]()
I have done work for banking locations all over the southeast doing exactly what you are doing. The directions I got was to take the FC readings at 36" above grade. I hope this helps.
Makes me wonder how it ever got to be a standard. If you ask me, they keep forgetting to specify a lit candle...This post got me thinking because I have a small light meter that measures lumens and i was thinking what's the difference.
- A lumen quantifies the brightness of a light in metric measurement. The amount of light energy reflecting from the surface of a sphere one meter in diameter surrounding a candle---now the standardized "candela" international unit--equals one lumen. A low-light source, such as a nightlight, might measure 12 lumens, while a 100-watt light bulb measures 1200 lumens.
In contrast, one footcandle of light is the measurement of the illumination which one candela provides on a surface one foot away from the source. A footcandle is a measurement of energy in non-metric terms. By converting lumens (one square meter worth of illumination) to footcandles (the illumination one foot away from the source), you are essentially measuring the same thing. The conversion formula is footcandles x 10.76=lumens.
Here is a better link; http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foot-candle
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As far as foot candles at banking institutions is concerned:
Do you measure level at grade? or higher?
Required illumination levels are given at working plane, eg. ~3' above finished floor for most general areas.