I was in B&Q yesterday, a store they built in Doncaster about 2-3 years ago, a good 3-minute walk from one end to the other. It has skylights and 3-tube fluorescent fixtures for lighting. I noticed the natural light got a bit dimmer, possibly the sun going behind a cloud. Then, the most amazing thing happened. The fluorescent lights got BRIGHTER!
I appreciate that this is probably part of an overall building environmental system, which manages heating / lighting in order to save energy, but can someone elighten me as to how it is possible to dim tens of kilowatts of fluorescent lighting, in unison, according to the brightness of the natural light? Just curious.
(They installed a similar system in some road tunnels in Doncaster centre 2 years ago, supposed to be constant fluorescent lights, with additional sodium lights coming on when its brighter outside. At the brightest setting, the ceiling is lined at both sides by lights! However, the sodium lights haven't made an appearance recently. Its either all or nothing. Usually drive through at night, and all the lights are on, blinding everyone, and during the day when just the florries are on and i cant see nothing. Waste of money.)
I appreciate that this is probably part of an overall building environmental system, which manages heating / lighting in order to save energy, but can someone elighten me as to how it is possible to dim tens of kilowatts of fluorescent lighting, in unison, according to the brightness of the natural light? Just curious.
(They installed a similar system in some road tunnels in Doncaster centre 2 years ago, supposed to be constant fluorescent lights, with additional sodium lights coming on when its brighter outside. At the brightest setting, the ceiling is lined at both sides by lights! However, the sodium lights haven't made an appearance recently. Its either all or nothing. Usually drive through at night, and all the lights are on, blinding everyone, and during the day when just the florries are on and i cant see nothing. Waste of money.)