As sulfur lamps in current production have a high output, it is often necessary to distribute the light to areas removed from the lamp. This can be achieved by using
light pipes as a conduit.
Light pipes The 3M
light pipe is a long, transparent, hollow
cylinder with a
prismatic surface developed by
3M that distributes the light uniformly over its length. Light pipes can be as long as and are assembled on site from shorter, modular units. The light pipe is attached to the parabolic reflector of the sulfur lamp. For shorter pipes, there will be a mirror at the opposite end; for longer ones, there will be a lamp at each end. The overall appearance of a light pipe has been compared to that of a giant-sized
fluorescent tube. One sulfur lamp with a light pipe can replace dozens of
HID lamps. In the
National Air and Space Museum, three lamps, each with a pipe, replaced 94 HID lamps while greatly increasing the amount of light delivered.
Indirect lighting Indirect fixtures direct most of their luminous flux upward toward a ceiling. A highly reflective ceiling can then serve as a secondary source of diffusive, low luminance, high visual quality lighting for interior spaces. The primary advantages of indirect lighting are the opportunity to significantly reduce indirect glare potential and to eliminate direct source viewing. At the
Sacramento Municipal Utility District (SMUD) headquarters building, two sulfur lamps were installed in the tops of free-standing
kiosks. The high ceiling was retrofit with high reflectance (90%), white acoustic
ceiling tile. The lamps direct their light upward, and it is reflected off the ceiling providing indirect light. Narrow, medium, or wide beam patterns can be created by choosing various reflector elements.
Direct lighting Light pipes would not be necessary in applications such as
stadium lighting, where a plain fixture can be mounted high enough so that the light can spread over a large area. The installation at
Hill Air Force Base contains lamps with light pipes as well as
downlight fixtures mounted high in an aircraft
hangar.
Optical fibers Optical fibers have been studied as a distribution system for sulfur lamps, but no practical system has ever been marketed. ==Other uses==