Large estates need consistent addressing, predictable EMC, and a control tree that looks the same on every floor. With trilux automatics and control, projects standardise on 220–240 V AC gear with DALI-2 backbones, presence/daylight linking, and clear fallback states for safety. Typical specs: PF ≥ 0.95 on powered hubs, THD ≤ 10–15 %, relay outputs AC-15 rated 5–10 A for contactor triggers, and SELV sensor buses kept segregated. Installers appreciate uniform connectors, labelled I/O, and enclosure options from IP20 panels to IP54 field boxes.
Families cover room controllers with 4–16 DALI channels, corridor/zone controllers, sensor heads (PIR, HF, lux), and gateways to BMS. Scene engines handle groups, sequences, and time channels; DT8 tunable-white and RGBW sit alongside DT6 constant-current loads. Wireless bridges (BLE/Thread) serve retrofit areas where bus cable is impractical. Using trilux lighting control systems across a campus keeps addressing, emergency test objects, and commissioning scripts aligned so spares and drawings stay lean.
Interfaces include DALI-2 per IEC 62386-101/102/103 and device parts for sensors/inputs (-301/-302/-304), 1–10 V, PWM, and dry-contact I/O. Mains supplies are 50/60 Hz; surge immunity 2–4 kV L-N is typical; operating −20…+50 °C; humidity 10–90 % non-condensing. EMC per EN 61547; harmonic limits per EN 61000-3-2/-3-3; safety to IEC/EN 61347 (control gear) and EN 62368-1 where IT elements apply. Documented max bus length (≈250 m per channel with spur rules) and 16 mA DALI bus current simplify load counting. When specifying trilux automation devices, publish MCB type, inrush (A²s), and SELV segregation so panel builders coordinate protection with VFD-rich circuits.
Open-plan offices: UGR-controlled luminaires on presence/daylight logic with hold-off near façades; scene recall for meeting rooms. Retail and galleries: CRI-critical tracks with low-level dimming and time-of-day CCT shifts. Education and healthcare: quiet sensor tuning, corridor function, and monitored emergency. Warehouses: aisle tracking with daylight harvesting and occupancy zoning to cap kWh. In mixed estates, trilux smart lighting controls expose BACnet/Modbus points for setpoints, energy, and alarms so facilities teams see actual status, not guesses.
DT6/DT8 drivers, emergency inverters, and presence/lux sensors from the same ecosystem share headers, address ranges, and test routines. trilux dimming modules drive constant-voltage strips via PWM or constant-current engines via DALI-2, with fade times and min-dim floors configurable. Keep 360° shield clamps at gland plates, respect LED lead-length limits, and record tc points for any in-gear drivers. Cross-links: Trilux luminaires, Trilux LED drivers, and Trilux emergency units ensure one connector map and one set of breaker tables.
Start with control topology: room/zone controllers, channel count, and sensor density. Fix interfaces (DALI-2 only or mixed with 1–10 V), then IP/IK for location, and enclosure space for loop-in/loop-out. Confirm addressing plan (groups, scenes, schedules), emergency testing mode (self-test vs DALI-2 202/203), and cybersecurity posture when gateways leave the lighting VLAN. For clean installs, trilux control accessories should match gland thread sizes, strip lengths 8–12 mm, terminal torque 0.6–1.2 Nm, and label fonts so maintenance can follow the same playbook floor-to-floor.
Rollouts work when logistics match commissioning slots. With trilux lighting management systems, we align procurement to your programme: project-specific pricing, near-hour quote turnaround by EAN/MPN, and live EU stock before lifts or night shifts are booked. The portal shows lead times, shipment tracking, and downloadable price lists with validity windows you can plan against. Trusted clients can use post-payment up to 30 days. We consolidate room-bundled consignments so controllers, gateways, sensors, drivers, and harnesses arrive together, and your account manager cross-checks channel counts, bus currents, IP/IK, inrush/MCB data, and wiring notes against your drawings—keeping deliveries site-ready across France, the Baltics, Germany, Spain, Italy, Belgium, and the Netherlands.
Offices and campuses: scenes, daylight, and analytics with clear fallback behavior.
Retail and hospitality: time-based CCT and low-level dim curves for displays.
Education and healthcare: occupancy patterns with quiet sensors and audited emergency logs.
Industrial and logistics: high-mount sensors, aisle zoning, and rugged IP enclosures.
All systems interconnect cleanly with Trilux luminaires, LED drivers, emergency units, and strips so one harness and label scheme applies across the project.