Editorial owner: MCL Solar Knowledge Center. Verification rule: Model-specific performance requires the relevant test report, site data, calculation, and contract documents. Last updated: July 16, 2026.

Key takeaways:

Inputs required before simulation

Area Required input
Road Width, lanes, surface, conflict areas, and target lighting class
Geometry Pole height, spacing, setback, overhang, outreach, tilt, and arrangement
Luminaire Exact model, LED input power, measured flux, and IES or LDT distribution
Calculation Grid, maintenance factor, average illuminance or luminance, uniformity, and glare or TI where applicable
Energy Night profile, worst-month PSH, battery assumptions, PV losses, and recovery requirement

Photometric standards and reports

LM-79 covers photometric and electrical measurements of complete solid-state lighting products. LM-80 covers lumen-maintenance testing of LED packages, arrays, or modules. They are not interchangeable. A complete luminaire life claim may use LM-79 measurements together with component maintenance data and an appropriate projection method, subject to report scope.

Spacing and pole height

Spacing-to-height rules can support a preliminary concept but do not prove compliance. Verify the exact road, pole, bracket, and luminaire distribution in the simulation. The selected result must also fit structural wind loading, foundation design, maintenance access, and photovoltaic exposure.

Acceptance package

Why rural-road and highway spacing ratios need photometric validation

Height-to-spacing ratios are useful for initial layout studies, but they cannot confirm compliance. Rural roads, multi-lane highways, curves, intersections and medians create different lateral and longitudinal distribution requirements. The same ratio can produce different uniformity and glare when the optical file or pole arrangement changes.

Use ratios to generate alternatives, then test each alternative with the exact IES or LDT file, road surface, maintenance factor and acceptance criteria. Record the final pole height, setback, overhang, tilt and spacing in the calculation report and installation drawing.

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