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Wild_Bill Wild_Bill is offline
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Default Reducing power of halogen lamps

Many semiconductors wouldn't exist if not for deposited forms of various
metals.. nor would many forms of illumination devices.

So generally, still on topic even if by trace amounts, which is far greater
than many of the bull**** hero worship/hate posts appearing every day.

--
WB
..........


wrote in message
...
On 28 Feb 2012 03:09:25 GMT, "DoN. Nichols"
wrote:


snippets not present

The question is: How does the lamp achieve the reduction in light
intensity (about half)?


The way I would do it is to put a diode in series with the lamp
on the low-intensity setting. I would guess that it is possible that
the diode could be inside the switch housing.


Correct. A dirt-cheap 1N5404, hidden inside the switch. Half-wave
rectifier properties etc. have already been mentioned.

I thought it was a neat trick. A resistor achieving the same thing
would have to be of the order of 17W or so.

BTW neither the people who sold the lamp nor the experts in the two
specialist electrical shops knew the answer.

I actually know the answer because I took the switch apart but when I
was looking for it before on Google etc. I could not find it.

I am posting here to see how widely this trick is known.

Oh, and the lamp is *metal*.


That is good -- so many are plastic these days. :-)


Purely so I don't have mark the thread "OT".

Michael Koblic,
Campbell River, BC