LENGTH OF RUN (FT.) / 7490
Example: a 100' run with 150 watts on it using 12 AWG wire will have: 150 w x 100 ft / 7490 cable constant = 2 voltage drop. Accordingly the run should be connected to the 13 or 14 volt tap so that after it loses 2 volts, the fixtures will still receive between 11-12 volts.
You can start by grouping fixtures into distance zones. \
- Group lighting fixtures with short distances of 0'-25' in the same zone,
- medium distance fixtures from 25'-50' in the same zone, and
- long distances 75'-100' in a zone
- A landscape lighting fixture that is 15 feet away from the transformer, and a fixture that is 100 feet away from the transformer should not be on the same run.
TIP #1
Lower loads per run means lower voltage drop. Break your layout up into multiple cable runs of ~ 100-150 watts per run. If you have more than 150 watts in an area -- break it up into 2 runs.
Break your layout into Distance Zones. For example put fixtures 15-30 ft away from the transformer on one run, fixtures 25-40 ft on another run, fixtures 30-50 ft on another run, and so on. The goal is have all the fixtures on a run be roughly the same distance from the transformer so they have similar amounts of voltage drop. That way when you adjust for voltage drop by increasing the voltage for that one run, the lights are not over-volted or under-volted.
Do not Daisy Chain the fixtures. In other words do not connect fixture after fixture in-line to the same cable. You can do a couple fixtures in series, but we don’t recommend exceeding more than 3 fixtures or 75 watts in series. Instead form T or spider splices so that there is never more than 2 fixtures between any one fixture and the transformer. Example you might have 6 fixtures on a run but the cable layout is like a T with 3 fixtures on the upper left part of the T and 3 fixtures on the upper right part of the T. Even the end fixture only has 2 fixtures between it and the transformer.
For each run, bring the wire from the transformer to the middle of that zone, and then branch off more cable from there to reach different areas. This can be done with a junction box/hub or by simply splicing in more cable to form a T layout. This T layout somewhat incorporates objectives we discussed above in TIPS 2 & 3, getting all fixtures with roughly the same length of cable to reach the transformer (TIP #2) and avoiding daisy chaining (TIP #3).
Layout Example:
- For example if you have 4 path lights along a driveway each 10 ft apart, run the cable from the transformer to the area between fixtures 2 & 3 (even if it means passing fixtures 1 & 2 without connecting them). Then splice in a T with cable going back to fixtures 1 and 2 and cable going out to fixtures 3 and 4, then connect the fixtures. This way electricity has to travel the same distance to reach the closest fixture (fixture #1) as it does to reach the farthest fixture (fixture #4). Additionally you only have 2 fixtures daisy chained in a row. If the farthest fixture is dim you can use a higher voltage tap on the transformer without over volting the closest fixture. All your lights in that distance zone/on that run have the same amount of cable to reach the transformer and accordingly will all have the same voltage and all be bright and even. It may seem odd to pass by a fixture with cable and then run more cable back to it, but what you are really doing is adding more cable distance to your close fixtures so that they equal the cable used in far fixtures.
Junction box/Hubs are an easy, efficient way to insure that you have done your layout properly. They virtually guarantee perfect results, bright even lighting, prevents over/under volting. Additionally all your connections are in one place (so they are easy to trouble shoot/service). Lastly, with VoltPro exclusive above ground Junction Box, all your connections are above ground in a dry, weather tight junction box, not in the ground exposed to constant moisture and harsh electrical conditions like traditional connections or even competing company's that sell "hub systems".
You do not have to hub every fixture. T-layouts are perfectly acceptable for a couple fixtures. A junction box is just more convenient if you have several fixtures all in a same area. Hubs can also make a great junction box for spider splicing several main cables together (10-2 or 12-2 cables). Many direct burial connectors cannot handle several thick gauge cables connecting together, hubs make for a convenient, dry, above ground place to make these connections. When doing more than a T connection but a spider splice with several cables in one place, junction boxes are great.
No comments:
Post a Comment