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Manufacturing Technology Insights | Friday, May 29, 2020
Designers and integrators of commercial architectural lighting can now configure LynTec's lighting control panels even more quickly within building automation systems.
FREMONT, CA: As electrical technology progresses, interdisciplinarity collaboration becomes increasingly important. The collaboration of all experts is critical to sustaining the high level of technology utilized in our daily lives and resolving the issues that arise from its use. LynTec, a pioneer in developing innovative electrical power control solutions for professional audio, video, and lighting (AVL) systems, has come up with new LCP Lighting Control Panel Series and RPC Power Control now include simplified native support for the Building Automation and Control network (BACnet) communication protocol. LynTec solutions, based on the internationally recognized Square D G3 PowerlinkTM controllable circuit breaker platform, can be integrated more quickly and easily into a building automation system that supports this open communication standard, saving significant time and labor during the installation.
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The American Society of Heating, Refrigerating, and Air-Conditioning Engineers (ASHRAE) designed the open-standard BACnet protocol expressly to enable building automation and control systems for HVAC, lighting, and access and fire detection—to interact easily with one another. LynTec has included IP versions of BACnet as a standard control interface option on all LCP and RPC boards (including Narrow Profile models). These boards are simple to install and function autonomously.
"In 2015 we introduced BACnet interoperability into our popular and award-winning RPC breaker panels. This paved the way for building owners who wanted to use our reliable power control solutions for their lighting systems to incorporate them into their existing building automation systems and reduce operating costs," states Mark Bishop, President of LynTec. "As we've continued to deliver new power control products tailored to the increasing needs of the lighting market, we wanted to make it nearly effortless for commercial architectural lighting designers and integrators to set up our lighting control panels into building automation systems. Now they can fully integrate them in a matter of hours—rather than days—and without hiring third-party specialists."
"We discovered LynTec when our customer needed an easy-to-install, simple-to-service, and affordable open-source lighting controller solution that would integrate with their existing building automation system," states Brian Moore, principal/director at FSM Controls LLC. "LynTec's controllers with the built-in BACnet feature was the selling point. We had the panels up and running in a matter of hours—a whole lot less time than we had anticipated. The web interface makes integration so straightforward, it's literally foolproof."
Introduced last year and designed exclusively for lighting and video wall installations, the LCP Series intelligently supports lighting and video power demands and is entirely self-contained with an integrated web browser-based interface, mobile control app, astronomical timer, and contact closure inputs for sensor control. Additionally, the LCP can communicate with any third-party control system that supports the DMX, sACN, HTTP, or Telnet protocols—the same feature set as the proprietary RPC Series, the industry standard for integrated AVL systems. It introduces numerous significant advancements to the company's market-leading panel options. First, the controller electronics were taken from the panel and installed in self-contained 12×12 containers. This boosts installation versatility and minimizes the amount of wall space required. Second, the power supply has been relocated to the primary panel enclosure, obviating the requirement for sidecars. As a result, a conventional NEMA 1 enclosure's maximum width is 20 inches.
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