View Full Version : Night Time Street Lighting very poor.
juliedohan
01-14-2019, 09:13 AM
There is a real problem with street lighting. At night Street signs are not visible. Something must be done
bagboy
01-14-2019, 09:45 AM
There is a real problem with street lighting. At night Street signs are not visible. Something must be done
Contact the county you live in.
Two Bills
01-14-2019, 10:28 AM
One of the main problems is the trees overgrowing the existing street liights.
Major pruning, or removal of some of them would make the streets brighter. JMO.
thetruth
01-14-2019, 10:35 AM
There is a real problem with street lighting. At night Street signs are not visible. Something must be done
You might want to have your eyes checked. As you age you need many times more light to see at night than you did when younger.
Obviously, a tinted windshield, a dirty windshield, scratched plexiglass, tinted or not on your golf cart all make it worse.
Nucky
01-14-2019, 11:23 AM
I am not pulling your leg or goofing around like I normally do. I had the exact same problem and understand where you're coming from.
First thing I did was apply RainX to my car immediately after a car wash and replaced the wipers with RainX Wipers. Then the same thing for the Golf Cart. Once the split window had to be put back up because of the freezing cold, (My Wife) I tried a different RainX for Acrylic Windows. It worked great, it removed many of the scratches and I thought I was all set, problem solved everything seemed so much brighter during the nighttime hours when I was struggling. It was great the first year but the next year I was good in the Car and No Good in the Cart.
Cataract removal on both eyes at Lake Eye did the trick. Talk about vivid. It's a new lease on seeing. I was and am stunned at the difference.
I don't think any town is going to change any of the Street Lights. Best of Luck to you.
graciegirl
01-14-2019, 11:45 AM
You might want to have your eyes checked. As you age you need many times more light to see at night than you did when younger.
Obviously, a tinted windshield, a dirty windshield, scratched plexiglass, tinted or not on your golf cart all make it worse.
I had the same issue. It is such a gradual thing sometimes, cataract growth and then I had trouble with street signs. I cannot tell you how much better I see them now that I have had my cataracts removed.
John_W
01-14-2019, 01:23 PM
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coffeebean
01-14-2019, 04:48 PM
I find the house numbers on the lamp post signs are very difficult to see at night. Lighted lamp post signs are very easy to see. It's a big help when there is at least one lighted lamp post sign on the street. That way you can sort of figure out which home you are looking for after dark.
Bay Kid
01-15-2019, 06:12 AM
Better to explore by cart during the daylight and know where we are going after dark. Cart lights aren't the best and the signs don't reflect off the lights.
Biker Dog
01-15-2019, 06:34 AM
Six weeks ago I reported the street lights out in a section along El Camino and guess what, THAY ARE STILL OUT.
mulligan
01-15-2019, 08:34 AM
Six weeks ago I reported the street lights out in a section along El Camino and guess what, THAY ARE STILL OUT.
If you did't report them to the power company that owns them, you wasted your time.
pauld315
01-15-2019, 09:29 PM
Six weeks ago I reported the street lights out in a section along El Camino and guess what, THAY ARE STILL OUT.
Who did you report it to? I had a problem with a street light in my neighborhood, communicated it to Duke Energy and they sent out a crew within a week to fix it. Our area is serviced by Duke.
graciegirl
01-15-2019, 10:28 PM
Our street light had the globe blown askew by a strong wind and looked like it would crash to the ground. I forget who I called but it was fixed the next day.
OrangeBlossomBaby
01-15-2019, 10:54 PM
Definitely don't drive a golf cart at night, until you've memorized the route by day. For me that only took two trips to learn the route from my Lifestyle visit home to Brownwood center, with the first trip having occured at night (learned my lesson and remembered exactly where I got lost, when I went back the next day to figure it out). It's not just the lights that's a problem. It's the fact that you're on a golf cart and not the street. It's easy to get turned around when you're dealing with going over and under and around the main road, when the thing you want is RIGHT THERE in front of you but you can't go there from here because you're on a golf cart path!
Where we live now in the north, they switched out the regular street lamps for LED lights and let me tell you - I might as well be driving with no lights at all. Those things are horrible. They're pin-points, and the luminescence is so bright it hurts your eyes - yet the light itself doesn't travel all the way to the pavement so you're still driving in almost pitch-black conditions. In the rain it's a hundred times worse because the light reflects upward from the water on the road, creating near-blinding conditions. Seeing street signs isn't too bad, if you're driving slower than the speed limit and squint right before you pass them.
graciegirl
01-16-2019, 06:46 AM
Definitely don't drive a golf cart at night, until you've memorized the route by day. For me that only took two trips to learn the route from my Lifestyle visit home to Brownwood center, with the first trip having occured at night (learned my lesson and remembered exactly where I got lost, when I went back the next day to figure it out). It's not just the lights that's a problem. It's the fact that you're on a golf cart and not the street. It's easy to get turned around when you're dealing with going over and under and around the main road, when the thing you want is RIGHT THERE in front of you but you can't go there from here because you're on a golf cart path!
.
We have GPS for our golf cart paths.
Home | The Villages GPS (https://villagesgps.com/)
photo1902
01-16-2019, 06:58 AM
We have GPS for our golf cart paths.
Home | The Villages GPS (https://villagesgps.com/)
Correct. GPS, or Villages GPS App and headlights until you learn your way around. Non-issue
Bogie Shooter
01-16-2019, 07:43 AM
Definitely don't drive a golf cart at night, until you've memorized the route by day. For me that only took two trips to learn the route from my Lifestyle visit home to Brownwood center, with the first trip having occured at night (learned my lesson and remembered exactly where I got lost, when I went back the next day to figure it out). It's not just the lights that's a problem. It's the fact that you're on a golf cart and not the street. It's easy to get turned around when you're dealing with going over and under and around the main road, when the thing you want is RIGHT THERE in front of you but you can't go there from here because you're on a golf cart path!
Where we live now in the north, they switched out the regular street lamps for LED lights and let me tell you - I might as well be driving with no lights at all. Those things are horrible. They're pin-points, and the luminescence is so bright it hurts your eyes - yet the light itself doesn't travel all the way to the pavement so you're still driving in almost pitch-black conditions. In the rain it's a hundred times worse because the light reflects upward from the water on the road, creating near-blinding conditions. Seeing street signs isn't too bad, if you're driving slower than the speed limit and squint right before you pass them.
Living in the north, north Villages or not a Village resident?
Two Bills
01-16-2019, 09:39 AM
Originally Posted by Jazuela
Where we live now in the north, they switched out the regular street lamps for LED lights.....
Got to agree with that. Back in UK they are changing to LED lights and the area illuminated is nothing like the good old amber glow lights we used to have, and as stated, when it rains visibility is further reduced by the road glare.
But they are a lot cheaper to run, and cost overides convenience, or choice.
graciegirl
01-16-2019, 12:48 PM
Originally Posted by Jazuela
Where we live now in the north, they switched out the regular street lamps for LED lights.....
Got to agree with that. Back in UK they are changing to LED lights and the area illuminated is nothing like the good old amber glow lights we used to have, and as stated, when it rains visibility is further reduced by the road glare.
But they are a lot cheaper to run, and cost overides convenience, or choice.
This is not about street lights but The Villages recently did a renovation at Saddlebrook and in the room we use for art, the florescent lights have been replaced with newer and more effective round lights. I bet they are LED. Makes an incredible difference in seeing well there.
Topspinmo
01-16-2019, 02:16 PM
There is a real problem with street lighting. At night Street signs are not visible. Something must be done
Just get some of the tug boat, locomotives, airplane landing halogen headlights that turns night into day and blinds approaching vehicles. If they aren’t bright enough drive around with your high beams on. It that not enough get you one of the red neck jacked up pickup that lights shine up into the trees and really blind on coming traffic.:ohdear::1rotfl:
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