Electronics Repair (sci.electronics.repair) Discussion of repairing electronic equipment. Topics include requests for assistance, where to obtain servicing information and parts, techniques for diagnosis and repair, and annecdotes about success, failures and problems.

 
 
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Matthew Smith
 
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Default Compact Fluorescent Failures

Greetings

Over the last couple of months, I have had a spate of failures of
compact fluorescent lamps (electronic ballasts). (All of the lamps in
our house, barring the ones that aren't kept on for any time, are CFLs.)

Whilst a couple have been generic Far-Eastern ones, I've had a couple of
failures of Philips units as well. (Back in England, one of the first
Philips electronic CFLs was still running well after seven years.)

One failure was within a week of installing a replacement - that went
straight back to the shop for replacement. (I've taken to writing the
installation date on the base.) In another, the electrolytic capacitor
had failed (end blown out); I replaced it and it runs fine, although I
have yet to replace the thermal fuse.

Of the others, it's a bit of a mystery; I've performed the following tests:
* Check appropriate DC voltage exists after bridge rectifier.
* Check electrolytic capacitor out of circuit.
* Check switching transistors out of circuit.

I'm now painstakingly tracing the circuits of two of the Philips units
so that I can mark up some voltage readings against "healthy" units. I
was rather surprised to find that even the latest units are constructed
with through-hole, discrete components. (What, no integrated switcher?)

None of the fittings are enclosed that the units would be getting
particularly hot.

We are on a single-wire (19kV SWER - read "highly unreliable power
supply") HV system - I don't know if this might have any bearing on the
problem (spikes, etc).

Some questions:

1) Does anyone have any figures for commonest causes of failure? (In
other words, where do I look first?)
2) Are the thermal fuses essential? Not all units seem to have them -
at least that I can identify. Whilst I'm not one to go removing safety
devices willy-nilly, more recent units do seem to have slightly lower
component counts, fuses included in some. Should I fit thermal fuses to
ones that don't have them?
3) Are these devices sensitive to spikes/surges and, if so, should I put
MOVs in any that I repair?

I know that these only cost $5 AUD each, but there's a principle at
stake here...

Cheers

--
Matthew Smith
South Australia
 
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