Easy way to determine hours of dust-to-dawn hours between dates for a given latitude?

Status
Not open for further replies.

Electric-Light

Senior Member
I am wondering if there is an app or a site that can let you enter latitude, start date and end date and provide cumulative dusk-to-dawn hour.

I would like to have an easier way to calculate cumulative dusk-to-dawn hours between dates to help with auditing a group of installed fixtures for conformance with LED degradation allowance specification at the given burning hour.
 

GoldDigger

Moderator
Staff member
Location
Placerville, CA, USA
Occupation
Retired PV System Designer
I would be concerned that the dusk to dawn time based solely on sunset/sunrise will not necessarily accurately represent the on time of the lighting.
On the other hand a member here produces photocell drop-in replacements that use GPS and astronomical data to control on/off times.
That is totally predictable and I would not be surprised if his company either has or could easily provide the kind of application you are looking for.

Sent from my XT1585 using Tapatalk
 

ggunn

PE (Electrical), NABCEP certified
Location
Austin, TX, USA
Occupation
Consulting Electrical Engineer - Photovoltaic Systems
I am wondering if there is an app or a site that can let you enter latitude, start date and end date and provide cumulative dusk-to-dawn hour.

I would like to have an easier way to calculate cumulative dusk-to-dawn hours between dates to help with auditing a group of installed fixtures for conformance with LED degradation allowance specification at the given burning hour.

This would likely do what you want:
http://solardat.uoregon.edu/SunChartProgram.html


Oh, you said cumulative. Never mind.
 

Little Bill

Moderator
Staff member
Location
Tennessee NEC:2017
Occupation
Semi-Retired Electrician
Some of the Intermatic Timers that are astronomical have data on that. Some come on a spec/instruction sheet and also have it in the timer program. You put in the info for your area and it sets the timer accordingly for D>D.

You might look on their website and get a chart. Probably have to do some math though for the cumulative part.
 

junkhound

Senior Member
Location
Renton, WA
Occupation
EE, power electronics specialty
search for insolation tables (yes correct spelling) on solar sites - you will get everything you need, including dark cloudy day data, etc.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top