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Footprints™ Online Tutorial

The Footprints™
interface should be self-explanatory to those already familiar with
template generators, but for others the following walk-thru should
be helpful.
Hit "Enter" on your keyboard when presented with the above
screen, and then browse
for "GW4X4M.ies", the photometry for our G18-4XL-400MH. (The larger
Gullwing.) You should already have a variety of IES files saved
on your PC or network. If not, download some of our
photometry. Footprints™, like all other lighting
software, must read data from such IES files to run calculations.
How else could it know how much light you get from that new luminaire
produced by Brand X?..
Next,
hit "Tab" to get to the next field: Lumens Per Lamp. With
most of our files, the default value will be "1000" - likely NOT
an accurate value for your lamp. The user is expected to use a
realistic value as published by a LAMP manufacturer. For this
exercise, let's use "40000".
Tab
again to the Light Loss Factor field. This is probably
the most complicated input value of all, and because it depends
on a multitude of variables including often unknowable site conditions,
the lighting industry generally defaults to something like 0.72
for metal halide and 0.80 for HPS. Let's use the former.
Go
to the Arrangement field and select your pole assembly.
The available options should cover just about every head arrangement
you'll need. Let's use "Single" for this exercise.
In
the Optical Height field enter the vertical distance from
the horizontal calculation plane to the luminous center. The luminous
center is taken as the center of the lens for cutoff-type luminaires
(i.e. an opaque box with a horizontal aperture in the bottom surface,
beyond which nothing protrudes), as the center of the arc-tube
for noncutoff-type HID luminaires with a clearly visible lamp,
and as the approximate "center of gravity" of acorn-type luminaires.
For this exercise, let's use "32", representing a 30' pole on
a 30" concrete base, less the depth of the housing.
For
Arm Length input the horizontal distance from the center
of the pole to the optical center. Let's use "1.5" to approximate
the Gullwing.
The
Tilt should be left at zero for everything but floodlights.
The deliberate tilting of a Gullwing is universally regarded as
the most despicable of sins... We don't recommend tilting any
of our cutoff luminaires. (You might as well buy a floodlight!)
For
the time being let's skip over the Description field and
the Include check box.
Tab
to the Scale field. If you're working with a scaled plot,
you should probably enter the scale of the drawing. (For example,
enter "20" if your scale is 1"=20'.) Otherwise, scale just determines
how large the template appears on-screen. If you used "1000" your
template would probably be a tiny dot on the screen, and if you
used "1" nothing would appear - the template is so large all of
the curves fall outside the window, maybe even beyond your monitor!
As a rule, use a standard value equal to or slightly greater than
your optical height, so let's use "30" for this exercise.
Next
is the Isoline Preference field. The default value is "Factors
of 2". This means curves will be shown at the Target Min
(minimum) value, 1/2 the minimum, and maybe 1/4 the minimum. (The
Target Min is specified two steps from now.)
When
generating a template, laymen are often tempted to follow the
"more is better" mantra: They show a dozen curves (isolines) at
every value but the one they are designing to... You really only
need (and want) 2 isolines in most cases, occasionally 3. Any
more merely add visual clutter. "2" is the default, and with good
reason, but let's use "3" for Number of Isolines to dress-up
this exercise a little.
Finally,
let's specify the minimum horizontal illuminance (footcandle)
criterion in the Target Min field. Note that nowhere in
that last sentence did we mention "average". Templates are useless
when designing to an average illuminance level - they only work
for minimum criteria. Let's enter a value of "1" for this exercise.
Tab
over to the Calculate button and hit "Enter" on your keyboard.
In a moment the following should appear:
You're
looking at THE characteristic template for the particular combination
of input values you entered. If you change any of these parameters
for your project, you MUST run another template. The contents
of this screen should be self-explanatory, but note that we report
the Maximum Illuminance. Many template generators don't
provide this info on-screen, though it is very useful in predicting
uniformity.
By
clicking the button with the printer icon you will send a black-and-white,
8.5" by 11" page to your default printer. If your current default
printer is a good one for the job, go ahead and give it a try.
Otherwise, go to Start-Settings-Printers, right-click on the desired
printer, and choose "Set as Default Printer".
If
you have CAD-type software that can open DXF-format drawing files,
try the DXF button and save to some place you'll remember,
then take a look at it with your CAD software. This somewhat unusual
feature allows CAD users to bring templates into their electronic
drawings, allowing them to design without any other lighting software.
Let's
return to Template Specification by clicking on the Close
button. (Or hit "Enter" on your keyboard.) One powerful feature
of Footprints™ is its ability to overlay one template
over another, providing a means of on-screen comparison between
competing optical systems. Click on the Form 2 (Optional)
tab with your mouse, and you will see a new input form in which
you can specify a second IES file, etc. Go ahead and grab "ECFH4M.ies",
which represents the ECA18-FH-400MH, Emco's Ecolume, and give
it 40000 lumens. Change the height to "31.5" to reflect the increased
housing depth.
The
Description can usually be left as-is. It will help you
differentiate templates when comparing optics, and would only
need to be changed if you were evaluating the effect of some variable
(maybe height) on a single IES file.
The
Include box is checked by default as soon as you load the
IES file. If you don't want to see a Form's template in
Preview, just uncheck this box. Leave it checked for this
exercise.
Reduce
the isolines to "2" and enter "0.5" for the minimum. This will
clean things up for our on-screen comparison. Calculate again
and you'll see this screen shortly:
Note
the increased maximum and the decreased area of coverage for the
Ecolume, offset by a marginal advantage in forward-projection.
Remember that Brand X can be compared in precisely the same kind
of head-to-head overlay comparison...
Note
also that in comparison mode the Print and DXF features
are disabled. Such a comparison would be very visually cluttered
when printed, and in the end it is simpler for CAD users to export
DXF files one-at-a-time.
At
this point it would be a good idea to adjust your personal preferences.
Close out from your Comparison and go to Tools-Settings
to specify the root directory for your IES files:
This should typically be "C:\IES\" which contains
your "Gardco Lighting" and "EMCO Lighting", etc, folders. This
can speed you up considerably if the root directory is instead
somewhere on a network or if it's several steps from the default
"C:\" path. You can also change the DXF path, printer alignment,
and units here. Go to File-Save to register your changes.
This marks the end of the online tutorial. The
FAQ page
offers a few more advanced tips.
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