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The Pros and Cons of Wireless Lighting Control

Turning off lights when they are not needed is one of the best ways to save energy. This is especially true in commercial buildings, where lighting can account for up to 40% of the building’s total energy cost.

With wireless lighting control, you don’t need to rely on employees to turn lights on and off. Instead, you can take advantage of scheduling, timers, occupancy sensors and photosensors to deliver the optimal illumination level in all situations while minimizing wasted energy.

Many traditional building and lighting control systems are fully wired, with all lights, sensors and switches hard-wired to a central controller or gateway.

Newer lighting systems take advantage of wireless mesh networking, which allows the lights, sensors, switches and the central controller to communicate with each other without the need for wires. Removing the wires provides more flexibility in terms of where switches and sensors can be placed, and makes it more affordable to include additional sensors in the network.

Wireless mesh also supports more flexible and easier control of larger systems with more devices. It allows you to run your lighting control solution as a single system that covers an entire building (or multiple buildings), as well as room by room (or floor by floor) deployments. This provides a system-wide view of operations, current power usage, savings, and more.

So how does a wireless mesh network work?

It consists of a mesh of interconnected devices (such as luminaires, switches, and controllers). Each device contains a small radio transmitter that it uses for communication. The transmitters can be built in to the device or can be fitted externally.

In a wireless mesh network, each device is typically connected through at least two pathways, and can relay messages for its neighbors.

Data is passed through the network from device to device using the most reliable communication links and most efficient path until the destination is reached. Two-way communication also helps to increase reliability, by allowing devices to acknowledge receipt of data and to require retransmission of data not received.

The mesh network is self-healing, in that if any disruption occurs within the network (such as a device failing or being removed), data is automatically re-routed. The built-in redundancy of having multiple pathways available helps to make the mesh network both robust and reliable.

Mesh networks are also highly scalable, in that you can extend the network simply by adding more devices. The network’s self-configuring capabilities identify when a device is added: working out what type of device it is, where its neighbors are, and what the best path is through the network. Weak signals and dead zones can also be eliminated simply by adding more devices to the network.

Pros and cons

While mesh networks provide many benefits for lighting control, and removing the wires provides even more including increased flexibility and reduced installation costs. But no single solution is perfect for everyone. Below is a summary of both the pros and cons of wireless mesh lighting control:

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