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Chuck[_7_] Chuck[_7_] is offline
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Default Determine voltage of a Christmas tree minibulb?


"Dugie" wrote in message
...
"hr(bob) " wrote in message
...
On Dec 21, 6:36 pm, "Dugie" wrote:
Hi,

Using my multi-meter, is there any way to determine the voltage of a
working individual mini-bulb from a set for a Christmas tree? One set
needs
2.5 v bulbs, another 3.5, another 6.

Thanks,
Dugie


Good question, complicated answer.

Start with a 2.5 V power supply, see how bright the light is, if it is
dim, try 3.5V and then 6V. But there is more to it than just the
voltage, there is also the current rating.

Even if there are 35 lamps in series across 120V, leading to a
conclusion of 3.5 V per bulb, different strings of 35 lamps may have
different currents. If you put a 3.5 V bulb from a low current string
into a string that has a higher current level, due to lower resistance
lamps, the 3.5V lamp will have too much current through it and light
up very brightly before burning out.

The only sure way to tell if a bulb is compatible with a particular
string of lights is to run the string of lights at half brightness or
lower, using a variac or lamp dimmer, put in the bulb in question, see
that it is equally as bright as the other lamps in the string, and
then increase the voltage gradually to make sure that the bulb in
questions stays the same brightness as the other bulbs in the
string.

Just measuring cold bulb resistance with a multimeter is not a very
reliable indication of the bulb as different bulbs have different
changes in resistance when they are heated to illumination levels.

H. R.(Bob) Hofmann


Very complicated. Thank you, Bob.
I forget to write: 250 lamps, "straight line" (meaning the same as in
series?), 110/120v AC. I don't think I am motivated to try your innovative
dimmer solution, but it's close. Sounds almost like fun.
The math for 250 lamps of 2.5 volts across 120v doesn't seem to work out
either.

Most likely the bulbs are in series strings of 50 2.5V bulbs. The 5 strings
are very likely in parallel. This is how they set them up. This is how the
math works. Is it one long string with a single AC power plug?