Bavolak Electric

Search the Bavolak website Contact Us Home PageNavigation Education and Safety Network Cabling Energy-Efficient Lighting Commercial Residential About Bavolak

Bavolak Electric
1153 - 16th Ave SE
Minneapolis, MN  
       55414
ph: 612-623-4031
fax: 612-623-4041

bavolak@usinternet.com

 

ENERGY EFFICIENT LIGHTING

New advances in lighting technology now allow commercial users to lower the monthly cost to light their facility and at the same time provide a much higher quality of light.  State of the art electronic ballasts and tri-phosphor T8 lamps provide a brighter, longer lasting, lamp with much improved color rendition at the work surface.  Your current lighting fixtures can be retrofitted with the new ballasts and lamps.  Most utilities provide significant rebates and low interest loans to help defray the cost of retrofitting, and your savings typically pay back in 2 to 3 years with zero impact on cash flow. Your savings pay the loan payments!

For example, a typical space with 20, four lamp four-foot fluorescent fixtures,

 

Old

New

lumens of light

55,000

59,000

watts consumed

3,500

2,140

cost savings

$0

$247

using old technology F40T12 lamps and magnetic ballasts will provide 55,000 lumens of light output and consume 3,500 watts of power per hour. Using new ballasts and lamps in the same 20 fixtures would consume only 2,140 watts of power per hour and provide 59,000 lumens of light with a 50% improvement in color rendition. 

Assuming a usage rate of 50 hours per week, at $0.07 per kilowatt-hour, would result in an annual cost savings of about $247.00 in lighting costs and an annual savings in maintenance cost of fixtures of $50.00.  Total annual savings is $297.00 or $14.85 per month. Also all installations are under warranty for all parts and labor for one year and ballasts are under warranty for, three years.

Two of our employees have earned the Green Lights Surveyor Ally designation from the Environmental Protection Agency.  Our company is a  “Trade Ally” with Xcel Energy and is currently affiliated with the Center for Energy and the Environment.