REPOST: In 2015, international spotlight is on light

The United Nations proclaimed 2015 as the International Year of Light and Light-Based Technologies to focus on the production of light and to raise awareness on what applications and technologies could solve international challenges. Read the article below.

Image Source: theconversation.com

During these dark winter months, spare a thought for artificial lights. From strings of lights adding holiday cheer to artificial sunlamps alleviating seasonal affective disorder, they brighten our days. And light’s applications can go much further than that. The United Nations designated 2015 as the International Year of Light and Light-Based Technologies to raise awareness of how photonic technologies offer solutions to international challenges. Light technology is now an active area of research in energy, health and agriculture.

First lighting the way

In the late 1800s, Thomas Edison created a practical light bulb, an electrically-powered, long-lasting light source that significantly changed our work, play and sleep habits. The ability to control light in new ways transformed how we experience and see the world. Light-based technologies such as optical fiber networks allow us to connect rapidly with people worldwide over the internet. Light emitting diodes (LEDs) are now everywhere from consumer electronics like smart phones to light bulbs for home lighting.

One recent example is the artificial skylight invented by researchers who spent over ten years refining the CoeLux system. This invention, which received Lux Awards 2014 Light Source Innovation of the Year, can fill a room’s ceiling mimicking sunlight from different latitudes, from the equator to northern Europe. The key to its success in replicating a sunny sky uses nanostructured materials to scatter light from LEDs in the same way tiny particles scatter sunlight in the atmosphere – so-called Rayleigh scattering. Funding for this project from the European Commission enabled scientific advances in light management and nanotechnology as well as the completion of a device that may improve quality of life in indoor settings, from hospitals to underground parking garages.

Image Source: theconversation.com

Illuminating research

Only recently has the full utility of LEDs been realized for general lighting. While red and green LEDs had been in commercial use for more than a decade, the missing color for producing white light was blue. Isamu Akasaki, Hiroshi Amano, and Shuji Nakamura cracked the blue conundrum in the early 1990s. Now, thanks to their work, white light LEDs are ubiquitous. In recognition of this energy-saving invention, they received the Nobel Prize in Physics last year.

Light was also recognized in the Nobel Prize category of Chemistry last year for light-based microscopy tools that use a few tricks to sense the presence of a single molecule. Microscopy had been limited by diffraction, where two adjacent objects can only be resolved if they are separated by more than half the wavelength of light used for imaging. But Nobel laureates Eric Betzig, Stefan Hell and W.E. Moerner all took different approaches using similar principles to get beyond the diffraction barrier in order to control the fluorescence of individual molecules to view them in high detail. By turning the light emitted from the molecules on or off, the scientists could reconstruct the location of the molecules at the nanometer scale.

Here’s how it works: a fraction of fluorescent molecules or proteins is first excited by a weak light pulse. Then after their emission fades, another subgroup of fluorescent molecules are excited. This cycle of on and off continues, and then the images are processed and superimposed to form a high-resolution map of individual proteins. The ability to peer into the nano-world of living cells to observe, for example, how proteins aggregate in the earliest stages of diseases like Alzheimer’s and Huntington’s, has just begun. Understanding disease progression at the single-molecule level could help identify when early intervention might be advantageous.

Investors must see the light

Light is a unifying science across fields like chemistry and physics, improving our lives and the world. But learning how to manipulate light is costly and takes time. Technologies are largely built on investments in basic science research as well as, of course, serendipity and circumstantial opportunities. Take LEDs for example. Research in blue LEDs started more than 40 years ago at Radio Corporation of America, but changes in the company’s funding structure stymied their development for two decades — until last year’s Nobel Prize winners solved the materials problem and the scale-up process.

Continued and sustained support of fundamental research is critical for future technologies not yet imagined or seen but that could have a transformative impact on our daily lives. For example, in agriculture, more effective harvesting of solar energy and its conversion into heat via greenhouses could enable year-round production as well as access to crops not currently available in certain climates.

Image Source: theconversation.com

In my own work as a chemistry researcher, my group invented a laser the size of a virus particle, which should not be possible based on traditional ways to control light but is, thanks to metal nanoparticles that can squeeze light into small volumes. These tiny lasers are promising light sources that can be used to send and receive data with high bandwidths as well as to detect trace molecules or bio-agents.

Construction of our nano-laser required precise control over the shape and location of the adjacent gold nanoparticles. That such nanostructures could even be made is because of the decades-long investment by the electronics industry in developing nanofabrication tools to make the tiny components in computers. Investments in both fundamentals and applications are critical, as has been highlighted by last year’s Nobel Prizes in Chemistry and Physics.

The UN’s designation of this International Year of Light will spotlight the potentials of these kinds of innovations and the need to continue investing in future technologies. From new ways to shake off those winter blues to manipulating light in small spaces, the trajectory for artificial light is bright indeed.

Sureway International is a trusted distributor of lighting, electrical, and industrial products, including safety apparel, welding supplies, and material handling. Visit this website for the company’s complete inventory of products and technologies that suit your electrical and industrial needs.

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Blue and the best

Let there be light!

The invention of an energy-efficient and environment-friendly blue light-emitting diode (LED) has beamed the spotlight on the trio of Isamu Akasaki, Hiroshi Amano and Shuji Nakamura. The 2014 Nobel Prize in Physics has been awarded to the said group for their outstanding work in creating the best blue light there is – efficient, versatile, and durable.

Image Source: en.wikipedia.org

The blue LED, which was first produced in the early 1990s, proved to be most effective in converting electricity into visible light. A crystal-based semiconductor, it generates little to no heat that is otherwise the case for the more commonly used incandescent lamps or bulbs.

Image Source: elite-opto.com

Its small dimensions allow the light to be used in a variety of applications – from indicator signs and data and communication, architectural lighting, to handheld devices ranging from a simple flashlight to the latest model of smartphones. A recently created application for smartphones retrieves product information by simply pointing the phone’s camera on an object illuminated by LEDs.

Image Source: ledsuperbright.com

Whilst initially very costly, the blue LED is targeted for mass production by exploring other materials that can be used to create crystals, which are the basic foundation of the LED makeup. As LEDs do not burn out or fail as fast as most lighting implements, they are very economical in the long run.

The blue LED will eventually be integrated in most, if not all, everyday gadgets. Projected to reduce energy used for lighting to 4% from its current rate of 20%, it is tagged as a true-blue example of useful science.

Sureway International is a Canadian owned and operated company which has been providing lighting electrical, and industrial products for over 30 years. Read on for more information about the services it offers.

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REPOST: 10 Minute Home Brightening To Do: Clean Your Light Fixtures

Light fixtures need to be cleaned regularly in order to enhance their illumination capacity and to check for defective bulbs. This post on Apartment Therapy provides tips to clean light fixtures safely and efficiently.

Image Source: apartmenttherapy.com

Looking for a weird cleaning task that you probably always forget about (or never think about) and that you could do around your home in like 10 minutes (30 if you have a big house)? It’s not pleasant or sexy, but it’ll make a surprising difference. This weekend, between brunches, enjoying spring (if the weather allows for such) and master napping, make the light fixture rounds cleaning up the sadly departed bugs who have decided to make your ceiling light their last resting place. Depending on how often you accomplish this task, your light fixtures could be really buggy. But even ones full won’t take that long to clean. And doing so will not only look nicer (no dead bug shadow sillouettes) but cleaning your light fixture may even let more light through, leading to a brighter room. And bonus: You can take this opportunity to change any light bulbs that need replacing. To accomplish this tiny home task, you can either do the dump + wipe method, or the vacuum + wipe method. Just remember safety first: Turn off the lights you’ll be cleaning around and grab a sturdy step ladder (no rickety chairs or anything) to step on. Tips: Whether you plan on vacuuming or dumping, you might consider placing an old towel on the ground underneath the light fixture before you remove it from the ceiling, to catch any dirt that may escape. Before you begin, see what kind of tool you might need to remove your light fixture (you’ll probably need a screw driver). When removing the light fixture cover, do it slowly and try not to tip it over as you bring it and you down off your step ladder. Once removed, either dump the fixture’s contents in a trash can or use a vacuum attachment to clean (being gentle so you don’t break or scratch any glass if that’s what your fixture is made of). Then, use your preferred method of cleaning to wipe clean the surface of the fixture (You could make your own cleaner). Replace the bulb if necessary. Put the fixture back on the ceiling (making sure it’s truly secure before you remove your hands) and repeat for how many ceiling fixtures need cleaning. And don’t forget your outdoor lights! Ideas for keeping light fixture bugs at bay: It’s unlikely you’ll be able to completely eliminate bugs from choosing your light fixtures as their last resting place. But, there are a few things you can do to minimize them in the future. One is make sure bugs don’t get into your home in the first place — plug any holes and repair window screens as possible. Keep the bathroom light off when not in use. And if you own your home or have a rad landlord, consider replacing your bug-collecting fixtures for one that won’t collect corpses.

Sureway International is a leading distributor of lighting, electrical, and industrial products in Canada. Get more home lighting improvement ideas here.

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Repost: Laurence Llewelyn Bowen’s lighting tips

Lighting is a key factor in achieving the look and ambience homeowners want. Acclaimed British interior designer Lawrence Llewelyn Bowen shares a handful of tips on how lighting, natural and electrical, can lend more life and color to any room.

Before designing a room, you need to consider two types of lighting: natural and electric. Make the right choice and you can turn a dull, soulless room into a vibrant space.

 

Image Source: minimaldesks.com

 

Natural light

 

To maximise natural light:

 

*Let light come through windows without interruptions. Remove secondary glazing, which absorbs light, and objects from window sills. Replace heavy curtains with blinds or muslin drapes.

 

*Mirrors amplify light. Place a large mirror opposite the window to reflect light around the room.

 

*Choose light and bright paint colours. Shades such as pale green, blue and lilac will make a room look larger whereas red, orange, brown and black absorb will light and make it look smaller and darker. As a rule of thumb, the lighter the paint – the closer to white – the more reflective it is.

 

*Colours that work well in bright, hot climates such as Italy look different in grey British daylight. Terracotta, for example, looks much duller. Your choice of flooring will affect how light a room is. Carpets are soft, absorbent and hold the light whereas floorboards with a high-gloss finish reflect it around the room.

 

Keep small, dark rooms bright and fresh, with as little pattern as possible. This will make the space look larger and lighter.

 

Image Source: yaleentrepreneur.com

 

Electric light

 

You can never light a room as efficiently as the sun so think of electric light as atmospheric background – it can create a cosy environment or a really dramatic one.

 

*Choose something more versatile than a single bulb hanging from the centre of the ceiling. Use directional lights on a track, which can be used to highlight your favourite painting or mirror.

 

*Layer the lighting throughout the room so you have the right kind for your different needs, such as ceiling lights, table lamps and uplighters.

 

Image Source: o-digital.com

 

*Put a floor socket in the middle of the room, so you don’t have trailing leads across the floor.

 

*Highlight architectural features, such as ceiling coving, with uplighters.

 

*Each lighting type should be controlled separately to prevent the room from looking like Blackpool illuminations.

Sureway International has illuminated homes and offices across Canada with its high quality lighting and electrical fixtures. Visit this website for more information on its products.

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Light up your life: How lighting promotes better quality of living

As the Illuminating Engineering Society (IES) puts it, “lighting is a tool used to create needed visual environments for people to live, work, play, learn, shop, communicate, and do business.” True enough, it would be hard to imagine life now without electrical light, and yet, its proper use is often taken for granted. Light should aid people as they perform daily functions indoors and outdoors, day and night.

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Lighting primarily enables people to see; therefore, it should be installed in a way that enhances the visibility of objects. This way, activities can be conducted easily, safely, and efficiently. Lighting adjustments depend on a number of factors: amount of sunlight, the contrast of colors between objects and the background, or the presence of objects that reflect light, etc.

Image Source: yatzer.com

The brightness of light should be adjusted to a level comfortable to sight. Improper lighting can result in a number of health problems, including eye strain, headaches, blurred vision, and even sleep and mood disorders.

Light exists to give form to the composition of objects. It could be designed to enhance the colors or ambiance of a thematically organized room, or to direct the eyes to points of interest, such as beautiful artwork. Accident-prone areas such as curbs and stair edges should also be well-illuminated to avoid injuries.

Image Source: sunfunder.com

Ultimately, the purpose of light is to provide comfortable and safe living or working conditions, and one should keep that purpose in mind in lighting design.

Sureway International is an all-inclusive source for lighting needs in Canada. Find fluorescent lights, halogens, incandescent bulbs, and an array of other lighting and electrical products at its website.

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REPOST: 10 Outdoor Lighting Solutions to Light Up the Night

Looking for bright outdoor lighting ideas? Yahoo! Shine offers the following lighting tricks that will enhance the safety of your home and accentuate the great features of your landscape at night.

Photo by winonalighting.com

(Photo by winonalighting.com) Image Source: Yahoo! Shine

Lighting the outside of your home is just as important as lighting the inside. And the same principles apply—you want to provide a combination of overall, task, and accent lighting. Overall lighting will illuminate general areas like driveways and entryways, enhancing safety and security. Task lighting is most important for your walkways and outdoor dining areas. Accent lighting helps bring to life great features of your home and landscape, such as architectural details and trees. You don’t need nearly as much light outdoors as indoors, but there are places that you can’t ignore, such as pathways, steps, decks, entryways, and driveways. Once you have those covered, move on to highlighting the parts of your property that deserve to shine, no matter the time of day. So, take a walk around your yard tonight and see how many of these types of lighting you can put into play.

1. Installing flood lights around your home will illuminate areas of your property that would otherwise be in darkness after sunset. They’re excellent security enhancements. Put direct flood lights onto treetops to create a spectacular accent for the front or back of your yard.

2. Accent lighting can help create a focal point in your outdoor space, highlighting landscaping, railings, or hardscapes. The accent lights on this bar draw attention to the area and provide general atmospheric lighting that sets just the right mood.

3. The wall-mounted lights on the front entryway of this home serve multiple purposes. Their simple and elegant design complements the facade, and their placement provides general lighting, accents the structure, and illuminates the walkway.

4. Covered patio spaces and pergolas can benefit from outdoor ceiling fixtures. Hanging lights in these spaces not only illuminates the conversation area, but also helps to provide a warm ambience on summer nights.

5. Outdoor well lights are installed in the ground and can provide uplight to both structures and landscaping. The well lighting around this pond highlights the plantings and reflects on the water below, casting a charming glow over the entire space.

6. The fiber-optic lighting in this pool imitates the reflection of a starry sky on the water’s surface, transforming an earthly area into an absolutely otherworldly relaxation space.

(Photo by fiberstarspoolandspa.com) Image Source: Yahoo! Shine

(Photo by fiberstarspoolandspa.com) Image Source: Yahoo! Shine

7. Border a pathway with low-profile fixtures to brighten the walk and enliven the entrance to your home. There are plentiful options in both low-voltage and solar fixtures that can accommodate any style and budget.

8. Though small, the wall-mounted fixtures along this stairway provide bright illumination to the treads. Tucked away along the wall, their small profile allows them to create a stunning visual as night falls.

9. Post lighting is a very traditional approach to general lighting for an outdoor space. Post lights can provide extra security for garages, walkways, and driveways, while serving as a stylish counterpart to your home’s architecture.

10. Give artwork and fountains the star treatment outdoors with spot lighting. Focusing light on a sculpture or water feature will ensure it remains the focal point of your space no matter what time of day it is.

(Photo by potterybarn.com) Image Source: Yahoo! Shine

(Photo by potterybarn.com) Image Source: Yahoo! Shine

 

Sureway International is a Canadian-owned and operated company that provides superior lighting solutions to homes and businesses. Visit this website to know more about lighting products for various applications.

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REPOST: A Guide for Specifying Commercial Lighting (Excerpt)

Lighting is an important aspect in commercial interior design and one that is often overlooked and underestimated due to its ubiquitous presence. Jeanette Fitzgerald Pitts of the Architectural Record discusses the vital role of lighting considerations in effective design.

Good workplace lighting must provide the necessary amount of light, while protecting the visual environment from glare and remaining within the allowable energy footprint. Image source: construction.com

As you prepare to read this article either in a magazine or online on your computer screen, take a quick survey of the lighting in the immediate area. Look up at the overhead fixture, referred to by many in the lighting design community as a luminaire. Is it aesthetically pleasing or does it seem to have been designed to be ignored? More importantly, does the fixture put the right amount of light in the right locations? Do you have enough light to be able to read comfortably or are your eyes straining to make out the words or squinting to block out an overly bright overhead light? Is the fixture causing an irritating and eye-fatiguing glare on the screen? Good lighting is necessary for creating a functional and productive workspace. Poor lighting often provides the setting for sore eyes.

Until recently, creating a good lighting environment was a challenge in compromise. It was almost impossible to find a fixture that looked good, could put the necessary amount of light on the work surface, in a way that was efficient and fit within the client’s budget. Too often designers were unknowingly forced to choose between a functional space, an efficient space, and a budget-friendly space. They selected highly efficient or inexpensive fixtures that created poor lighting environments, because the fixtures were unable to provide light where it was needed, at the recommended levels, or in a uniform fashion. The efficient and effective fixtures were prohibitively expensive, requiring significant cost trimming in other areas to stay within the project’s budget.

The good news is that today compromise for good lighting is no longer necessary. Technological advancements in light sources and fixture design now offer the specification community the rare opportunity to select aesthetically pleasing lighting fixtures that provide the right light, with greater energy efficiency, in a way that actually saves money in materials and maintenance. The secret is knowing what to look for in a fixture.

The IESNA recommends that an open-plan office maintain 400 lux (40 footcandles) at the working level. Image source: construction.com

Productive Workspaces and Good Lighting

The most basic design goals in an office or commercial setting are to create a place where work can be accomplished, communication can occur, and business can be conducted. Light is instrumental in creating that productive environment. The inextricable relationship between lighting and productivity is due to the fact that people use their eyes to interpret and interact with the world around them, and the human eye requires light.

In short, the cornea bends rays of light, reflected by the object of interest, through the pupil, which is the dark, round opening in the middle of the colored iris. The light is focused onto the retina in the back of the eye. Photoreceptor cells in the retina transform the light into an electrical impulse that is sent through the optic nerve to the brain. Without the appropriate amount of light, a person’s ability to perform a visual task, such as reading email, reviewing a spreadsheet or watching a slide presentation, is compromised and they must spend time and energy adjusting, both consciously and unconsciously, to see the materials better. This immediately diminishes their productive time and efforts to create, analyze or respond.

Provide the Right Amount of Light in the Right Location

In order to select fixtures that will provide an appropriate visual environment and productive workspace, start by identifying the visual tasks that will be performed in the area and the amount of light necessary for a person to perform them. The Illuminating Engineering Society of North America (IESNA) has developed recommendations, highly regarded throughout the industry, that outline optimal light levels for performing various visual tasks or the amount of light best suited to specific types of space. The IESNA 9th Edition Handbook recommends that lighting systems in office buildings be designed to maintain 400 lux (40 footcandles) at the working level in a single office, 400 lux (40 footcandles) at the working level in open-plan offices, and 300 lux (30 footcandles) at the working level in a conference room. It is interesting to note that these recommended light levels assume that the majority of office work is computer based. When paper-based reading tasks were the primary office function, recommended light levels ranged between 750 and 1,000 lux (75-100 footcandles) at the working level.

As was alluded to in the wording of the IESNA recommendations, to create an optimal visual environment, fixtures must do more than provide the recommended amount of light, they must provide it at the working level, also referred to as the work plane. In the office setting, the IESNA recommendations identify the work plane as being roughly 2.5 feet high, generally regarded as a typical desk height. In corridors, stairwells, and restrooms, denoted by the IESNA as circulation areas, the optimal light levels must be maintained on the floor, enabling occupants to move safely through the spaces.

The lamp, the lens, and the reflector work together to form the optical system in a light fixture. Image source: construction.com

The Importance of the Optical System

It is the optical system within a fixture that takes the light emitted by the lamp and distributes it into the interior space. The design of the optical system determines if the fixture has the control to spread a pleasant, uniform light into the specific areas it is needed or if the light leaves the fixture in a more haphazard manner, invariably ending up in places that it is and is not wanted with varying degrees of uniformity.

There are three components that work together to form the optical system in even the most basic light fixture. They are: the lamp, the lens, and the reflector (also referred to as the fixture housing). The lamp emits the light. The lens is the material that the light passes through as it enters into the interior environment. As the lamp emits light, not all of the light immediately passes straight through the lens. Fluorescent lamps, for example, emit light of the same intensity in a full 360 degrees around the lamp. Even if the lens was of a sufficient size and design to catch and transmit the light emitted from 180 degrees of the lamp, the remaining 50 percent of the light emitted by the lamp is not aimed directly at the lens. The reflector is the enclosure around the lamp that reflects any remaining light back out through the lens.

A rudimentary optical system may consist of no more than a lamp in a metal box that has been painted white, so that it reflects light, instead of absorbing it, and a basic lens, which is essentially a generic piece of clear prismatic acrylic or glass that protects the lamp from accumulating dust. This is the type of optical system often found in the traditional recessed, lensed, troffer luminaires commonly installed throughout office buildings and other commercial facilities.

Unfortunately, the simple design of these types of optical systems severely limits both the efficiency of the fixture and its ability to control the placement of the light it provides. Poor efficiency is the result of poor internal light management. These basic metal box fixtures are typically not designed to direct the reflected light out of the box as quickly as possible and, instead, allow the light to bounce randomly around inside the fixture, losing energy and intensity with every extra reflection. Poor light placement is the result of the rudimentary reflector and basic lens having no ability to direct the light into the areas it is needed and instead allowing light rays to scatter indiscriminately into the interior space or concentrate on one particular area, causing a visual hot spot or glare.

Read the full article here.

For a selection of the different kinds of lighting applicable to commercial spaces, visit the Sureway International website.

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REPOST: Power tool survey: The most used power tools by contractors

Corded power tools such as hammer drills, reciprocating saws, and power drills are among the most commonly used power tools according to a survey conducted by Contractor Magazine, a leading online publication for mechanical contracting.

ReciprocatingSaw
Image Source: contractormag.com

CHICAGO — This March, CONTRACTOR surveyed readers to find out what are the most used corded and cordless power tools amongst contractors, where contractors prefer to purchase those tools, what voltage battery packs they use, among other questions. CONTRACTOR also asked a handful of tool manufacturers what type of tool trends they are seeing and what they are forecasting for the future.

The online Power Tool Use Survey was sent to a net random 23,900 subscribers. The majority of respondents are company owners — 51% — and 14% of respondents are in leadership positions, such as president, CEO or partner. There were 288 respondents.

Survey findings show that 82% of respondents are involved in residential construction; 69% are involved in commercial construction; 30% are involved in industrial construction; and 23% are involved in institutional construction. Sixty-nine percent of respondents are involved in remodeling/retrofit work and 25% are involved in new construction work.

Based on type of contracting work, respondent firms are engaged in air conditioning (62%); warm air heating (58%); plumbing (55%); hydronic heating (wet) (53%): radiant floor heating (43%); and bath/kitchen remodeling (40%).

What are some of your favorite tools? To continue the discussion about the most popular and most used tools, go to our new Plumbing Talk forum.

According to the survey, with the exception of floor drivers (13%), each corded power tool in the study is used by at least 40% of respondents. These corded power tools include the pipe threading machine, drill driver, demolition hammer, drain cleaning machine and pipe cutting machine. The most commonly used corded power tools include hammer drills at 87%, reciprocating saws at 86%, power drills at 85%, circular saws at 74% and rotary hammers at 70%.

For cordless power tools, the most commonly used are power drills at 84%, followed by drill drivers at 75% and reciprocating saws at 71%. About half of all respondents use cordless hammer drills (55%) and/or cordless circular saws (49%).

And where do contractors go to do their tool shopping?

According to the survey, most contractors are likely to purchase their power tools from industrial supply houses (59%) and/or home centers (51%), followed by plumbing wholesalers (39%); and coming in to a close third is the Internet (37%). Twenty-seven percent of respondents are purchasing tools at the hardware store, and 19% are utilizing a catalog to make purchases.

Survey respondents are most likely to use 18V battery packs for their cordless power tools (84%), with 12V battery packs following at a distant second (26%).

Manufacturers’ perspectives

According to Brian Allison, vice president/general manager of Rothenberger USA, key growth opportunities for the company are centered on alternative methods to join pipe.

“We continue to see growth in the press tool market,” said Allison. “In the U.S. the percentage of copper installations done by press technology is still behind the European market, which means there is a significant opportunity for growth in North America. Additionally, fitting manufacturers continue to produce new products for various types of pipe, which will allow for additional growth. In addition to press tools, there is large growth opportunity in plastic pipe fusion. Plastic pipe fusion involves joining types of plastic pipes by simultaneously heating both pieces and pressing them together to form a permanent bond. When done properly the two pieces will join together and appear as a single solid piece of pipe.”

Article continues here.

 

Sureway International is Canada’s leading distributor of electrical, lighting, and industrial solutions. The company offers efficient door to door delivery anywhere in Canada and ensures that each of its product carries the trademark quality which the company is known for throughout the years. Go here to browse through its broad inventory of cost-efficient, high-quality industrial products 

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REPOST: Tech.view: Air superiority

Air-powered tools have been showing their dominance over electric tools for several years now since its birth during the Second World War. This article from The Economist explains their many advantages.

Image Source: www.economist.com

BEFORE computers became ubiquitous, anyone studying aeronautics had to spend long, torturous hours grappling with equations in a textbook by Ludwig Prandtl, an engineering professor at Göttingen University during the 1930s, whose theoretical insights laid the foundations for Germany’s aerial supremacy in the years leading up to the second world war.

Today, few bother with such mind-numbing formulae. A branch of engineering called “computational fluid dynamics” has rendered such theoretical approaches obsolete. Instead, computers perform millions of calculations using algorithms and numerical methods to simulate the way the airflow behaves as it passes over a solid object. Coming from a bygone age, your correspondent has a well-thumbed copy of the classic German textbook on his shelf. He also has, courtesy of Professor Prandtl, an abiding respect for the compressible nature of air.

As well as aeroplanes, streamlined trains and slippery racing cars, anything from wind tunnels to jackhammers is stuff to be savoured. A special place in the pantheon of compressible air is reserved for the modern dentist’s drill. Those old enough to have suffered the drilling nightmares caused by that articulated contraption from dentistry’s dark ages, with its painful whirling of wire-belt drives, will know precisely why. Even closer to his heart, though, are those pneumatic hand tools that make DIY a pleasure instead of a chore.

For much of his adult life, your correspondent has wanted an air compressor for use at home. Unfortunately, he could neither afford one, nor could he find a place to house such a large, noisy, smelly, diesel-powered machine. Over the past couple of years, though, he’s noticed that air compressors have become ever cheaper and more powerful, thanks largely to the industrious Chinese. Better still, being electrically powered instead of relying on an internal-combustion engine, they can be used indoors.

You can now buy a perfectly adequate three-horsepower compressor that runs off a 120-volt household electricity supply for less than $180 (anything beefier needs a special 240-volt supply, like a washing machine). A half-inch impact wrench capable of loosening the rustiest of wheel nuts can be had for $80. A nailing gun for timber framing costs about the same; a paint gun around half as much. Air tools for cutting and nibbling thin sheets of metal are $20 or so.

After years of relying on electricity to power his tools, your correspondent has finally taken the plunge and equipped his workshop with compressed air. What impresses him most is not just how cheap air tools are, but the staggering amount of torque they deliver compared with electrical tools. The little impact wrench he now uses was a third the price of the huge electric hammer-drill he bought several years ago to bolt his car hoist to the garage floor to prevent it slithering around during an earthquake. The air drill weighs a little over half as much as the hefty electric one, and yet delivers more than 20 times the torque.

An air tool’s other great advantage is that it has no heavy electric motor, and fewer moving parts, inside it to lug around. As a result, air tools spin faster, do not overheat, shrug off abuse and are more reliable, as well as being lighter and easier to manhandle. There is a lot to be said for having one powerful electric motor back at the compressor turning electrical energy into potential energy stored in compressed air in a 10 gallon tank, instead of having a wimpy electric motor in each of the various hand tools used for drilling, cutting, nailing, shaping, loosening, sanding, grinding, polishing and painting.

The air tool with the nearest thing to a motor inside it is an impact wrench. This has a tiny turbine with vanes like a paddlewheel in the handle. Pressing the trigger causes high-pressure air to flow into the tool, spinning the turbine and converting some of the compressor’s stored energy into rotational energy before venting to the atmosphere.

In pricier models, a small planetary (epicyclic) gear-set steps the speed of the rapidly spinning turbine down to 3,000-4,000 revolutions per minute, while raising the torque even further. A ratchet arrangement forces a spring-loaded “hammer” to bang repeatedly into an “anvil” on the tool’s driveshaft. Like a conventional hammer—which generates a powerful, but short, impulse from a fairly weak, but long, swing of the arm—an impulse wrench concentrates many thousands of rotational blows a minute into freeing a rusted lug nut.

Air does this better than electricity because it endows the tool with a far greater power-to-weight ratio. And weight is a disadvantage in hand tools, not just because it makes the job tiring. With common hammer drills, for instance, the combined mass of the ratchet mechanism, the drill bit itself and the chuck that locks it in place is often comparable to the mass of the rest of the tool. That makes transferring energy from the motor to the tip of the drill very inefficient. As a result, the drill then has difficulty penetrating materials like concrete.

The answer is to use a lighter design all round, and to separate the hammering action from the drilling motion—as is the practice in air wrenches. The two functions can be separated in electric drills, but it makes them considerably more expensive than they would be otherwise.

Meanwhile, the universal electric motors used in power tools may be compact, able to run at high speed and good at coping with varying loads, but they have a built-in limitation. As the load on an electric power tool increases, the torque rises to handle the work, while the motor slows down as a consequence—and eventually stalls when the load gets excessive. Do that too often and the heat generated will burn the insulation around the electrical windings and destroy the motor.

The tiny turbine in an air drill, by contrast, has nothing to burn out—and simply goes on churning out a large dollops of torque, almost irrespective of the load exerted on it. Such is the charm of compressed air. Professor Prandtl, by all accounts the most impractical of men, would have been delighted, though hardly surprised.

Sureway International stocks a wide range of high-quality industrial tools and equipment from trusted manufacturers and continues to add new product lines to serve the ever-changing needs of customers across various industries. For more details, visit this website.

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Let there be light, but not incandescent

Finding the right lighting product for the home is a task that should not be taken for granted. Homeowners need to take into consideration both the price and the location where the lighting products will be installed. And now, homeowners need to keep in mind, too, the ban on the incandescent light bulb, which started in 2014 and has already been enforced by many countries, including the United States and Canada.

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Below are some of the best replacements to the incandescent in the market today that comply with homeowners’ needs and international requirements:

A compact fluorescent lamp (also compact fluorescent light) bulb or more popularly known as CFL is marketed as the replacement for incandescent bulbs. The tubular and helical bulbs use about 75 percent less energy. Relatively inexpensive compared to other lighting products, they can last up to nine years with normal usage.

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When price is not a factor, homeowners can splurge on light emitting diode or LED bulbs. Costing many times more than their counterparts, LED bulbs are nonetheless the most energy-efficient. They feature great light quality and have instant brightness. They also last the longest, around 20,000 hours, which could translate to decades of use.

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Another contender to the rule of the incandescent is the halogen bulb. Halogens are similar to incandescent in terms of light quality and price. They can be a good option for homeowners who are still undecided if they want CFLs or LEDs.

Homeowners who need help in choosing the best lighting product could seek assistance from lighting specialists like Sureway International. The Canadian-owned and operated company focuses on meeting customers’ needs by offering high quality products and new technologies at competitive prices coupled with outstanding customer service and commitment to stipulated shipment agreement and deadlines. Visit the company’s official website to learn more about its wide selection of lighting products.

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