


Low-voltage lighting is a whole other animal. Commercial businesses might have a harder time passing inspection.Thus, you may be limited in your fixture choices due to the fact you have to limit your wattage as well. Once again, due to the fact that low-voltage lighting has to go through a transformer in order to be converted, the transformer can easily become overwhelmed with demand.
Low voltage landscape lighting full#
Hence, by the time the energy reaches your lighting fixtures, you may not have full power, making your lighting less bright. Because low-voltage lighting has to be run through a transformer in order to make the standard line voltage of 120v to either 12v or 24v, the potential for lost energy is present. You also have to have your low-voltage lighting near the transformer. You’d almost rather have a bee near you than a transformer at times. Besides having to deal with one more box in your yard or near your home, transformers can be buzzy and sometimes loud. THE DISADVANTAGES OF LOW-VOLTAGE LIGHTING Our lighting specialists work tirelessly to make your home bright and your business beautiful. The Lighting Corner in Grandville and Grand Haven offers the best lighting solutions to meet your residential and commercial lighting needs, from bedroom lighting to restaurant lighting. In today’s blog post, we’ll go over the disadvantages of low-voltage lighting and how you can choose if low-voltage lighting is for you. In our last blog post, we dived into low-voltage lighting and discovered many advantages, such as safety and mobility.
