Skip to main content

Generac’s new cube hybrid tower light

Generac’s mobile products division, formerly known as Tower Light, unveiled a new cube version of its hybrid lighting tower. The hybrid towers offer significant savings in both cost and carbon - 86% and 72% respectively - when compared to standard tower lights. “We developed the hybrid in the UK with contractor Balfour Beatty,” said Generac’s UK MD Paul Hay. “Contractors are being asked not only for material and labour costs at tender but also being asked how they will reduce their carbon footprint.”
January 6, 2017 Read time: 2 mins
Generac’s new cube hybrid lighting tower runs for 700 hours

8070 Generac’s mobile products division, formerly known as Tower Light, unveiled a new cube version of its hybrid lighting tower.  The hybrid towers offer significant savings in both cost and carbon - 86% and 72% respectively - when compared to standard tower lights.

“We developed the hybrid in the UK with contractor Balfour Beatty,” said Generac’s UK MD Paul Hay. “Contractors are being asked not only for material and labour costs at tender but also being asked how they will reduce their carbon footprint.”

The LED lights are powered by a battery and the unit has an on-board charging generator so that in a 14-hour period, for instance, seven hours will be supplied by the battery.  The hybrid versions come at a 30% premium in terms of capital cost, but can pay back in around two years said Hay.

The cubed hybrid lighting tower has the same specification as the wheeled version, with the advantage that where several are required, they can be more efficiently transported: 20 cube towers can fit in the same space as six or seven wheeled versions. “They are ideal for applications like motorway works where you are not moving the lights around regularly,” said Hay.

“The other big benefit is that they reduce safety risks because they have to be re-fuelled much less often. Refuelling is needed every 700 hours compared to traditional ones which run for 65 hours.”

To date the UK has been the main market for hybrid lights, accounting for 25% of all those sold there. The Netherlands is the next strongest market, followed by France, said Hays.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Boels take up Trime X-ECO lights in the UK
    May 21, 2018
    Boels Rental, the UK division of the Dutch firm Boels, has upgraded its hire fleet with 150 of Trime’s X-ECO LED tower lighting sets. The deal with Trime, based in the county of Cambridgeshire, England, is the first for Boels UK following their acquisition of Supply UK in April 2017. Boels UK will distribute the units throughout their network of depots for use on construction sites, highway projects and outside events. The UK order follows on from a recent investment of a fleet of X-ECO LED’s by Boels’s pa
  • Europe's smart road pricing project
    April 12, 2012
    New trials pave the way for smart road pricing using Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS). In recent years, the concept of road charging has been gaining acceptability among Europe's policymakers.
  • Europe's smart road pricing project
    February 20, 2012
    New trials pave the way for smart road pricing using Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS). In recent years, the concept of road charging has been gaining acceptability among Europe's policymakers.
  • Caterpillar eyes better performance in 2015 amid stormy weather
    May 13, 2015
    Caterpillar vice president Paolo Fellin sums up the past year for the global equipment manufacturer and looks at the increasing importance of telematics and machine control. David Arminas reports from Caterpillar’s Demonstration and Learning Centre in Malaga, southern Spain First the good news. Despite the difficulties, especially of the financial markets, 2014 was “a record year for a lot of things” for global heavy equipment maker Caterpillar.Now the bad news. Hang onto your seats because despite some