- Location
- Massachusetts
As long as I have been in this trade I have been of the opinion that the correct way to provide emergency lighting was with a generator and that use of emergency battery units was a cheap way out pushed by the bean counters.
In the past couple of years this view of mine has been changing.
I am interested in how others feel about this issue, remember I am talking about emergency loads not data centers or anything that falls outside of article 700.
Something that really started this change of opinion was 9/11, obviously that is not an regular emergency but shows to me having all your emergency power from one source can really backfire.
A single event on one floor may cut off all emergency service to the floors below or above depending on the generator location.
Many of the buildings we do use a combination of self contained exit signs, stand alone emergency battery units and ballasts with battery back up. With today's battery technology it seems like the way to go.
Forgetting the upfront costs of generators and all their separate distribution gear and branch circuits you still have the cost of a service contract to maintain the genset, this would easily off set the costs of replacing the batteries once in a while.
Also there is a new fluorescent lamp product out, it is a fluorescent tube that works like normal but glows for hours after power is removed, it can be removed from the fixture and used like a flash light and if hits the ground and shatters it still produces light for hours.
So how about it, what are the engineers feelings on this or the feelings of other installers like myself, should we steer clear of generators?
Any opinions on this will be more then welcome.
Bob
In the past couple of years this view of mine has been changing.
I am interested in how others feel about this issue, remember I am talking about emergency loads not data centers or anything that falls outside of article 700.
Something that really started this change of opinion was 9/11, obviously that is not an regular emergency but shows to me having all your emergency power from one source can really backfire.
A single event on one floor may cut off all emergency service to the floors below or above depending on the generator location.
Many of the buildings we do use a combination of self contained exit signs, stand alone emergency battery units and ballasts with battery back up. With today's battery technology it seems like the way to go.
Forgetting the upfront costs of generators and all their separate distribution gear and branch circuits you still have the cost of a service contract to maintain the genset, this would easily off set the costs of replacing the batteries once in a while.
Also there is a new fluorescent lamp product out, it is a fluorescent tube that works like normal but glows for hours after power is removed, it can be removed from the fixture and used like a flash light and if hits the ground and shatters it still produces light for hours.
So how about it, what are the engineers feelings on this or the feelings of other installers like myself, should we steer clear of generators?
Any opinions on this will be more then welcome.
Bob