Green Technology: Saving Energy with Vacancy Sensors New London CT

If you want to find out more about occupancy and vacancy sensors, the Home Lighting Control Alliance has an informative white paper that describes how they work, basic and advanced features, and how they are typically installed and set up.

Langston Environmental Service
(800) 322-1527
136 Grovers Ave
Bridgeport, CT
Environ International Corporation
(860) 241-0802
77 Buckingham St Ste 1
Hartford, CT
Mgp Environmental Partners LLC
(203) 327-2888
733 Summer St
Stamford, CT
Enviroguard
(203) 696-1080
362 River St
Bridgeport, CT
Ramco Environmental Inc
(860) 278-6196
253 Locust St
Hartford, CT
Essentials For Life, LLC
860-376-8921
372 Beach Pond Road
Voluntown, CT
A B S Environmental Asbestos & Lead Removal
(203) 849-8757
17 Cranbury Woods Rd
Norwalk, CT
Advanced Environmental Redevelopment
(203) 333-2767
904 Madison Ave
Bridgeport, CT
Oscars Abatement
(860) 296-7450
29 1/2 Meadow St
Hartford, CT
Hygenix Inc
(203) 324-2222
49 Woodside Street
Stamford, CT

Green Technology: Saving Energy with Vacancy Sensors

Want to save electricity but can’t afford a full-blown lighting control system? One of the best and least expensive ways to save energy in your home is to install occupancy or vacancy sensors, in rooms where lights may be left on. 

A vacancy sensor detects when someone is no longer in a room and shuts the light off automatically (turning them on requires a manual switch). Occupancy sensors can turn the lights on and off automatically. Both type of sensors can be installed easily to replace standard light switches, and are ideal for bathrooms, bedrooms, closets, garages, basements, hallways and utility spaces—anywhere a light can be inadvertently left on and forgotten. They can be used with incandescent or fluorescent lights.

Best of all, the sensors are good for the environment. “For every switch that is replaced by a vacancy sensor, carbon dioxide emitted into the environment is reduced,” says Carlos Villalobos, product manager for Watt Stopper/Legrand . “If 100 million households were to control just one 60-watt bulb with one vacancy sensor, this would represent almost 500 million kilowatt hours (kWh) in energy savings—about $50 million per year—and a reduction of almost a billion pounds of carbon dioxide.”

If you want to find out more about occupancy and vacancy sensors, the Home Lighting Control Alliance has an informative white paper that describes how they work, basic and advanced features, and how they are typically installed and set up.

Some highlights from the white paper:

  • Vacancy sensors work by sensing changes in heat (such as body heat) against background radiation.
  • The sensor includes a lens that determines the coverage area (field of view), sensitivity (ability to detect levels of motion such as body or hand movements) and range (distance from the sensor motion can be detected).
  • Sensors feature adjustable time-delay settings that allow the homeowner to set the amount of time that will occur between the sensor detecting an absence of people and shutting the lights off.
  • Dual-relay sensors allow the switching of two loads, like a bathroom light and fan, from one location. “Housed in a single-gang device, dual-relay sensors give installers the option of two loads or adding a load without having to install a larger electrical box,” says Villalobos.
  • Multiway sensors that switch from more than one location are available as well; coverage is extended to the area covered within line of sight of any one of the connected sensors.
  • Some occupancy sensors, offering both automatic-ON and automatic-OFF are available with light -level sensing so that the lights do not turn on automatically if there is sufficient daylight in the room, an added energy-saving feature for rooms that receive a lot of sunlight throughout the day.
  • Some sensors are also available with a dimmer switch for dimming.



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