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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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#41
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Sam Goldwasser wrote:
Eeyore writes: Seán O'Leathlóbhair wrote: What is going on? Is a tiny current leaking, building up a charge in a capacitor somewhere until a sufficient voltage builds up to spark in the bulb and discharge the capacitor, and then the cycle repeats. That would appear to be the case. This is at least partly true. Low energy lamps including compact fluorescents and normal fluorescents on electronic ballasts use a switching circuit to produce the high voltage for the fluorescent lamp. The input is a bridge rectifier and filter capacitor. Any source of AC even a small amount of leakage through a defective swtich, a switch with a neon lamp night light feature (lighted when off), an electronic timer, a motion sensor-controlled yard light, or a dimmer that isn't fully off, may cause the voltage to build up on the filter capacitor until the "startup circuit" kicks in. This usually has some sort of threshold de vice like a zener diode or diac that won't pass current until the voltage across it exceeds a spec'd value. When that happens, the lamp starts up and strikes but just for an instant since there isn't enough current available on the input to maintain it. I'm somewhat skeptical of the explanation with respect to inductive or capacitive coupling (though possible under just the right - or wrong - conditions) but it doesn't take that much leakage from some other fault to do this. Perhaps we've finally discovered perpetual motion ![]() Take care. Ken |
#42
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When it is switched off, it blinks every few seconds. So, I guess
that there must be a problem with the switch If it is passing nothing then it would seem impossible for the bulb to do anything. I did not notice any problem with the previous incandescent bulb but I guess that if the switch is leaking a tiny amount, the filament would glow too little to be seen. Is one of the switches illuminated? Those will pass enough current to slowly charge up the filter capacitor in the fluorescent bulb and cause it to blink. |
#43
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![]() "Seán O'Leathlóbhair" wrote in message ups.com... Chris Jones wrote: Seán O'Leathlóbhair wrote: I am not sure if this is an appropriate group for this question. If not, please suggest a better one. I have a light in the house which I have wanted to switch to a low energy bulb for a long time. The hold up was that I needed a very small bulb. At last, I have found a small enough bulb but something odd occurred as soon as I put it in. When it is switched on, it works as expected. When it is switched off, it blinks every few seconds. So, I guess that there must be a problem with the switch If it is passing nothing then it would seem impossible for the bulb to do anything. I did not notice any problem with the previous incandescent bulb but I guess that if the switch is leaking a tiny amount, the filament would glow too little to be seen. I have a few questions: What is going on? Is a tiny current leaking, building up a charge in a capacitor somewhere until a sufficient voltage builds up to spark in the bulb and discharge the capacitor, and then the cycle repeats. Is it safe? Will it wear out the bulb very fast? Is it likely to be enough to replace the switch? (Actually three switches can turn this bulb on and off). Might I have to replace the wiring? (Much harder than just replacing the switches) -- Seán Ó Leathlóbhair This has come up before in aus.electronics though I don't recall if there was a definite cure for it. Thanks. If there is no danger, I don't need a cure. The flash is not irritating. The CO detector nearby flashes more brightly. I am just worried that it is telling me that something nasty is wrong with my wiring. -- Seán Ó Leathlóbhair It'll probably cause the CFL to fail much sooner than it otherwise would. I'd check the wiring and switches just because it's easy to do, make sure there isn't any moist gunk between contacts or anything else like that. Another option is to wire a small incandescent bulb such as a nightlight in parallel but this is not always practical. |
#44
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William R. Walsh wrote:
Hi! When it is switched on, it works as expected. When it is switched off, it blinks every few seconds. Do you have one of those switches that glows when you turn it off? No, plain simple switches with no good reason to pass any current when off. I have one attached to set a of conventional fluorescent fixtures (one four tube and one two tube). When the switch is "off" it still passes a tiny amount of current and this makes for a faint flashing in the two tube fixture. As far as I can tell this is perfectly safe...it has never caused any problems for the lamp or myself. I do, however, have to turn the power off when changing the lamps in the two tube fixture. Otherwise there is the possibility of getting a small shock. I noticed the problem when putting the bulb in - it blinked. Of course, my first reaction was that I had left the switch on but this was not a likely mistake since the previous incandescent bulb was not dead. -- Seán O'Leathlóbhair |
#45
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![]() Seán O'Leathlóbhair wrote: I noticed the problem when putting the bulb in - it blinked. There's something very odd going on if it did that. Have you got a DVM/DMM ? Graham |
#46
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On 25 Jun 2007 20:29:58 -0400, Sam Goldwasser
put finger to keyboard and composed: "William R. Walsh" m writes: Hi! I have a few questions: What is going on? See my other reply. Do you have a light switch that glows when you turn it off? This will place a small amount of current flow across the lamp, which may make it flicker. Will it wear out the bulb very fast? It may result in a slight amount of wear on the bulb, but I doubt the change in lifetime would ever be noticed. This I wouldn't be so sure of. Startup is hard on fluorescent lamps. I recently had two lamps (EDAPT 20W) fail in a relatively short time. Curiosity got the better of me so I cracked them open to have a look. Lamp A lasted about 3 months, lamp B about one week. Lamp A had an open filament, and both had open "startup" resistors. Lamp B would start when it was cold (or completely discharged?) but would not restart just after it had been switched off. Lamp A would flash briefly if I tapped it, despite the resistor being open. I'm wondering whether the failure in the resistor caused the premature burnout of the filament? If so, then this would be in line with your comment re startup "trauma". BTW, I repaired lamp B and it has been working ever since. I should also mention that lamp A was full of dry solder joints which may have contributed to its early demise. - Franc Zabkar -- Please remove one 'i' from my address when replying by email. |
#47
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On Mon, 25 Jun 2007 23:47:00 GMT, Eeyore
put finger to keyboard and composed: Franc Zabkar wrote: Eeyore put finger to keyboard and composed: Sjouke Burry wrote: Eeyore wrote: Sjouke Burry wrote: Capacitive leakage from the HOT wire to the switch wire? So why doesn't this happen all the time ? Answer, the capacitance is very low, as is the frequency. A leak cap has very high impedance, and via the input rectifier can charge the input cap(slowly). Then when a threshold is passed, the circuit produces a flash. And it only happens, if the input capacity of the rectifier circuit is low compared to the leak cap. It flashes every 2 seconds or so. Clearly a very low leakage current won't do that. This fellow experimented with a ~1mA leakage current at 240VAC: http://groups.google.com/group/aus.e...5398c8c?hl=en& "Changed to 270 kohms and now have a 13W CFL flashing at exactly 1 Hz". I make that ~ 11nF ! You won't get that easily. Graham Yes, I would think that even 100pF is way too much. The hypothesis regarding stray wiring capacitance does seem very far fetched. Maybe this explanation is a better one, a least for the other thread: http://groups.google.com/group/aus.e...9fbd911?hl=en& AFAICS, you can *very* roughly calculate the amount of leakage current required to account for the OP's observations by assuming that all the current is used in charging the main filter cap, say 4.7uF. Assuming also that the trigger voltage for the DIAC is around 50V, then ... i = C . dV/dt = 4.7 E-06 x 50V / 2s = 0.12 mA - Franc Zabkar -- Please remove one 'i' from my address when replying by email. |
#48
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On 26 Jun, 00:58, Jamie
t wrote: Ron(UK) wrote: Eeyore wrote: "Ron(UK)" wrote: If the neutral wire isn't properly grounded enough voltage can be induced by or leak from other 'live' circuits, maybe enough to cause the fluorescent fittings to randomly flicker. Ron, when the switch is off, there is no circuit. The neutral potential literally doesn't matter. Graham It`s a two way switch, there`s plenty of potential for leakage paths. You can easily get 100v on the neutral if it`s floating above earth potential. Ron(UK) Hmm. 2 way, 3 way , 4 way and any number of ways you want! why would that matter?, the neutral should not be part of the switching circuit. I have not examined this particular circuit in detail yet. When I came to the house, I was surprised to find three switches for this landing light. I was used to two and knew how they worked but three was new to me. I checked how it could be done and found this. The neutral is connected directly to one of the socket terminals. Each of the switches has two inputs and two outputs. The two inputs are always connected to the two outputs but when the switch is moved the connections are swapped. The live goes to one of the inputs to the first switch. The two outputs from this switch go to the two inputs of the next and so on through as many switches as you like (three in my case). Finally one output from the last switch goes to the other socket terminal. So, it is always possible for any switch to change the state of the lamp. This will mean that the two possible live wires run together for a considerable distance, more than the length of the landing due to detours to the switches but the inductance theory still surprises me (I am not saying impossible my knowledge of electromagnetism is too old and rusty to say that). Animal damage or some other cable damage sounds quite possible, a leakage between these two lines would not blow a fuse but just allow a small current to flow. Checking this cable is going to be quite unpleasant since the loft is very small. The last time that I was up there, a few years ago, to install aerial cable, the lighting cables appeared to be OK. I will start by checking out all the switches since this is a relatively easy job. I can also use a multimeter and one of those neon screwdrivers to perform some more tests. Sticking the probes of the multimeter into the light socket sounds a little scary. This is a UK lamp socket which may be unfamiliar to US readers and some others. The bulb does not screw in it is a bayonet mount. You push the bulb in and turn and a couple or prongs catch the mount and hold the bulb. The contacts are two sprung pins which press onto contacts at the bottom of the bulb. The collar is metal. To UK readers and others who know the system: is the collar connected to anything? If my multimeter probe touches a contact and the collar, is something nasty going to happen? Obviously if both probes touch their contacts and the collar, something nasty may happen. -- Seán Ó Leathlóbhair |
#49
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On 26 Jun, 00:54, Sam Goldwasser wrote:
=?iso-8859-1?B?U2XhbiBPJ0xlYXRobPNiaGFpcg==?= writes: On 25 Jun, 15:39, Ken Weitzel wrote: Se=E1n O'Leathl=F3bhair wrote: On 25 Jun, 15:21, BH wrote: On Jun 25, 10:03 am, Se=E1n O'Leathl=F3bhair wrot= e: I am not sure if this is an appropriate group for this question. If not, please suggest a better one. I have a light in the house which I have wanted to switch to a low energy bulb for a long time. The hold up was that I needed a very small bulb. At last, I have found a small enough bulb but something odd occurred as soon as I put it in. When it is switched on, it works as expected. When it is switched off, it blinks every few seconds. So, I guess that there must be a problem with the switch If it is passing nothing then it would seem impossible for the bulb to do anything. I did not notice any problem with the previous incandescent bulb but I guess that if the switch is leaking a tiny amount, the filament would glow too little to be seen. I have a few questions: What is going on? Is a tiny current leaking, building up a charge in a capacitor somewhere until a sufficient voltage builds up to spark in the bulb and discharge the capacitor, and then the cycle repeats. Is it safe? Will it wear out the bulb very fast? Is it likely to be enough to replace the switch? (Actually three switches can turn this bulb on and off). Might I have to replace the wiring? (Much harder than just replacing the switches) -- Se=E1n =D3 Leathl=F3bhair Try the buld in another location. Give us moe information on the bulb. Thanks. Normally, I would immediately try to isolate the cause by moving things around but, in this case, I dismissed the bulb as the problem since I thought that if the switch was passing nothing when off (as it should) then there was no way the bulb could do what it is doing. If the bulb is at fault then it is not the only fault (or so I assumed at any rate). The brand of the bulb is Philips but I cannot tell you more until I get home and look at it. I will post again later with fuller details and the result of a test in another location. Hi... Can't help wondering - it's not possible that one of those "switches" is a dimmer, is it? Take care. A good question but no. It is a landing light. There are three switches, one at each end and a third in the middle where a small corridor from the bathroom joins the landing. All simple on off switches (well they must be changeover switches but, from the user's point of view, they are just on off). And none are lighted switches? --- sam | Sci.Electronics.Repair FAQ:http://www.repairfaq.org/ Repair | Main Table of Contents:http://www.repairfaq.org/REPAIR/ +Lasers | Sam's Laser FAQ:http://www.repairfaq.org/sam/lasersam.htm | Mirror Sites:http://www.repairfaq.org/REPAIR/F_mirror.html Important: Anything sent to the email address in the message header above is ignored unless my full name AND either lasers or electronics is included in the subject line. Or, you can contact me via the Feedback Form in the FAQs.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Further details elsewhere but no they are not lighted. -- Seán Ó Leathlóbhair |
#50
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On 25 Jun, 19:35, Yukio YANO wrote:
Seán O'Leathlóbhair wrote: I am not sure if this is an appropriate group for this question. If not, please suggest a better one. I have a light in the house which I have wanted to switch to a low energy bulb for a long time. The hold up was that I needed a very small bulb. At last, I have found a small enough bulb but something odd occurred as soon as I put it in. When it is switched on, it works as expected. I have a few questions: What is going on? Is a tiny current leaking, building up a charge in a capacitor somewhere until a sufficient voltage builds up to spark in the bulb and discharge the capacitor, and then the cycle repeats. Is it safe? Will it wear out the bulb very fast? Is it likely to be enough to replace the switch? (Actually three switches can turn this bulb on and off). Might I have to replace the wiring? (Much harder than just replacing the switches) -- Seán Ó Leathlóbhair On a cold wet miserable winter day in the early 70's. I was troubleshooting a newish car, that wouldn't start, that had just been serviced by a car dealership. a few days before. To cut a long story short, they lubricated the Point Breaker mechanism with a clear Grease that they probably used for years with no problems ! With 2 to 6 Amps flowing, the contact mechanism probably cooked off any wet or conductive grease. With the newer Hybrid Transistor switched points the DAMP grease appeared as a Dead Short to the few milliamps required to actuate the Transistor. I would suspect the switches (All three) are lubricated with a grease that is conductive enough read (dirty enough)to cause the problems indicated ! The quick and dirty, to clear the excess grease is to replace the lamp in question with a 60 - 100 watt bulb and switch On and Off a few times. in the Off position any conductive grease will be burned away. I may try that since it is easy. The previous bulb was a 40W incandescent but we would not normally switch it on and off rapidly. Would cleaning the contacts with something like WD40 be a good or bad idea? I have never used this on mains voltage devices. Any fire Hazard, Not likely, after all these switches were manufactured and sold for years lubricated just like this, besides we are talking about a drop or two grease total ! If you are worried, replace the switches. If this doesn't clear the problem than you may have exessive capacitative coupling between the various conductors due to the three-way switching, under a very light load ! -- Seán Ó Leathlóbhair |
#51
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![]() "James Sweet" wrote in message news:A61gi.6303$oo5.5110@trndny09... When it is switched off, it blinks every few seconds. So, I guess that there must be a problem with the switch If it is passing nothing then it would seem impossible for the bulb to do anything. I did not notice any problem with the previous incandescent bulb but I guess that if the switch is leaking a tiny amount, the filament would glow too little to be seen. Is one of the switches illuminated? Those will pass enough current to slowly charge up the filter capacitor in the fluorescent bulb and cause it to blink. If it's leakage from anywhere, a bog-standard electricians neon test screwdriver should show that up. Or try wiring a mains rated neon indicator straight across the lampholder without the lamp in place. If it glows, you have leakage either across one of the switches, or between lives. Bear in mind that with a two way circuit, there are two wires, one or other of which is always live, running (normally) in a common cable sheath, between the two switches. Also bear in mind that the poster said in his third reply that not only is there a two way switch at either end of the landing, there is actually a third switch at the half way point where a corridor joins the main hallway. I'm not quite sure how you factor a third switch into a 'standard' two-way circuit, but it occurs to me that it might well be 'stealing' its live either from a second lighting circuit, or from some considerable distance around the lighting circuit, from where the main live for the circuit is taken. Either way, that third switch must join into the actual landing light circuit, via some kind of junction box, which may be part of the light fixture ceiling rose, if that's nearby, or a separate entity in the loft. It could be potentially another place for some kind of leakage taking place. Did anyone see in the Sunday paper, an article regarding these CFLs causing pre-fit symptoms to epilepsy sufferers ? Seems it's becoming common, and the same people don't suffer with ordinary flourescents. Some research suggests that it might be to do with the (apparently) very uneven spectral response of the tri-phosphors used to try to get an 'incandescent' colour. Hmmm ... Arfa |
#52
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On 26 Jun, 01:35, Ken Weitzel wrote:
Sam Goldwasser wrote: Eeyore writes: Seán O'Leathlóbhair wrote: What is going on? Is a tiny current leaking, building up a charge in a capacitor somewhere until a sufficient voltage builds up to spark in the bulb and discharge the capacitor, and then the cycle repeats. That would appear to be the case. This is at least partly true. Low energy lamps including compact fluorescents and normal fluorescents on electronic ballasts use a switching circuit to produce the high voltage for the fluorescent lamp. The input is a bridge rectifier and filter capacitor. Any source of AC even a small amount of leakage through a defective swtich, a switch with a neon lamp night light feature (lighted when off), an electronic timer, a motion sensor-controlled yard light, or a dimmer that isn't fully off, may cause the voltage to build up on the filter capacitor until the "startup circuit" kicks in. This usually has some sort of threshold de vice like a zener diode or diac that won't pass current until the voltage across it exceeds a spec'd value. When that happens, the lamp starts up and strikes but just for an instant since there isn't enough current available on the input to maintain it. I'm somewhat skeptical of the explanation with respect to inductive or capacitive coupling (though possible under just the right - or wrong - conditions) but it doesn't take that much leakage from some other fault to do this. Perhaps we've finally discovered perpetual motion ![]() Take care. Well this light may be free in the sense it is being powered by energy that was previously leaking unnoticed but I doubt that is free in the sense that no energy is being consumed. The waste may even have been reduced, the incandescent bulb may have drawn more from the leakage. -- Seán Ó Leathlóbhair |
#53
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On 26 Jun, 10:13, "Arfa Daily" wrote:
"James Sweet" wrote in message news:A61gi.6303$oo5.5110@trndny09... When it is switched off, it blinks every few seconds. So, I guess that there must be a problem with the switch If it is passing nothing then it would seem impossible for the bulb to do anything. I did not notice any problem with the previous incandescent bulb but I guess that if the switch is leaking a tiny amount, the filament would glow too little to be seen. Is one of the switches illuminated? Those will pass enough current to slowly charge up the filter capacitor in the fluorescent bulb and cause it to blink. If it's leakage from anywhere, a bog-standard electricians neon test screwdriver should show that up. Or try wiring a mains rated neon indicator straight across the lampholder without the lamp in place. If it glows, you have leakage either across one of the switches, or between lives. Bear in mind that with a two way circuit, there are two wires, one or other of which is always live, running (normally) in a common cable sheath, between the two switches. Also bear in mind that the poster said in his third reply that not only is there a two way switch at either end of the landing, there is actually a third switch at the half way point where a corridor joins the main hallway. I'm not quite sure how you factor a third switch into a 'standard' two-way circuit, but it occurs to me that it might well be 'stealing' its live either from a second lighting circuit, or from some considerable distance around the lighting circuit, from where the main live for the circuit is taken. Either way, that third switch must join into the actual landing light circuit, via some kind of junction box, which may be part of the light fixture ceiling rose, if that's nearby, or a separate entity in the loft. It could be potentially another place for some kind of leakage taking place. I do have a mains rated neon screwdriver so that will be one of my first tests. The third switch puzzled me when I moved to the house. I researched how it could be done and I have posted a description elsewhere in the thread. The system is rare in the UK but I read that it is common in Spain and some other places. I have not yet checked whether my house is wired as described but flicking any switch at any time will change the state of the light so the switches are not simply in series or parallel. If the wiring is as expected, there will be two alternative live wires (always one live and one dead) running together for a considerable distance, rather more than the length of the landing . A leak between these two would explain the problem but not cause a fuse to blow or an RCCB to trip. Did anyone see in the Sunday paper, an article regarding these CFLs causing pre-fit symptoms to epilepsy sufferers ? Seems it's becoming common, and the same people don't suffer with ordinary flourescents. Some research suggests that it might be to do with the (apparently) very uneven spectral response of the tri-phosphors used to try to get an 'incandescent' colour. Hmmm ... -- Seán Ó Leathlóbhair |
#54
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On 26 Jun, 08:41, Franc Zabkar wrote:
On Mon, 25 Jun 2007 23:47:00 GMT, Eeyore put finger to keyboard and composed: Franc Zabkar wrote: Eeyore put finger to keyboard and composed: Sjouke Burry wrote: Eeyore wrote: Sjouke Burry wrote: Capacitive leakage from the HOT wire to the switch wire? So why doesn't this happen all the time ? Answer, the capacitance is very low, as is the frequency. A leak cap has very high impedance, and via the input rectifier can charge the input cap(slowly). Then when a threshold is passed, the circuit produces a flash. And it only happens, if the input capacity of the rectifier circuit is low compared to the leak cap. It flashes every 2 seconds or so. Clearly a very low leakage current won't do that. This fellow experimented with a ~1mA leakage current at 240VAC: http://groups.google.com/group/aus.e...41abb5398c8c?h... "Changed to 270 kohms and now have a 13W CFL flashing at exactly 1 Hz". I make that ~ 11nF ! You won't get that easily. Graham Yes, I would think that even 100pF is way too much. The hypothesis regarding stray wiring capacitance does seem very far fetched. Maybe this explanation is a better one, a least for the other thread:http://groups.google.com/group/aus.e...f4e439fbd911?h... AFAICS, you can *very* roughly calculate the amount of leakage current required to account for the OP's observations by assuming that all the current is used in charging the main filter cap, say 4.7uF. Assuming also that the trigger voltage for the DIAC is around 50V, then ... i = C . dV/dt = 4.7 E-06 x 50V / 2s = 0.12 mA That's reassuring, 0.12mA does not sound too frightening. So, if your assumptions and calculations are correct, the capacitor holds 235uC just before the flash and just under 12mJ will be released. This sounds plausible for the faint flash. It is easily seen in the dark but could not be described as bright. It is almost impossible to see in daylight. -- Seán Ó Leathlóbhair |
#55
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Seán O'Leathlóbhair wrote:
Would cleaning the contacts with something like WD40 be a good or bad idea? I have never used this on mains voltage devices. WD40 = Bad idea. Save it for the rusty gate hinges. Ron(UK) |
#56
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Jamie wrote:
Ron(UK) wrote: It`s a two way switch, there`s plenty of potential for leakage paths. You can easily get 100v on the neutral if it`s floating above earth potential. Hmm. 2 way, 3 way , 4 way and any number of ways you want! why would that matter?, the neutral should not be part of the switching circuit. It will if any of the switches are wired up wrong. Ron(UK) |
#57
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Posted to rec.audio.tech,sci.electronics.basics,sci.electronics.components,sci.electronics.repair,sci.engr.television.advanced
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![]() "Arfa Daily" wrote in message ... "JANA" wrote in message ... If the switch that is series with the light bulb has a night light in it, the current pass of the night light will cause the CFL to flicker. If the CFL is connected to a switch that is electronic, the small leakage of the electronics will cause the CFL to flicker or in some cases to not turn off. Regular CFL's cannot be used on standard light dimmers and many of the electronic timers. This is a big inconvenience for many people. When regular lamps become unavailable, I can see a lot of problems with these new types of lamps. The biggest one will be the pollution from their disposal. They use mercury, phosphors, and many types of materials that are very harmful for the environment. There is also the electronics circuit board, which contain components that have the same recycling problem as used in most electronics. Even though they last longer, when they are eventually put out in to the garbage, they will eventually end up in the land fills. They are going to be a very big problem compared to the simple light bulb that was made of simple glass and metals. Regular light bulb materials are about 85% recyclable. There are almost no materials in these that are bad for the environment. Most CFL's materials are not recyclable, and their materials are very polluting. It looks very strong that the government is pushing the CFL's to save some electricity to sell to large industry. This is the only answer that is logical. There are NO green house gasses from using regular light bulbs. When more electricity is sold to industry, the pollution problems from its generation will actually increase, unless the generation is from water power, or nuclear power. -- JANA _____ These are my (well known) views also, but I fear we are squeaking like little lost mice in the dark ... The general public are not told - and would not understand anyway - the wider implications of these knee-jerk government interventions in our lives. All too often, they are poorly thought through, and are dreamed up as a response to the latest bit of pseudo science to hit the news stands. At the moment, anything with the words 'green' or 'eco' or 'environment' or 'global warming' are fair game for this sort of nonsense, and to add to its 'validity' in the public's eyes, they've already started inventing new bits of techno-babble like 'carbon footprint' and 'carbon offsetting' to justify what amounts to little more than opinions by a vociferous band of scientists getting paid large amounts of money and credibility ratings, to promote the government line. As you say, these CFLs are just trading one form of alleged pollution, for another definite one ... Arfa Arfa Quite apart from the problems of disposing of old CFLs, I question the whole principle of Low Energy lighting. If you have a conventional bulb, much of the energy output is in the form of heat, which will help heat the room, and consequently will reduce the need for other heating, central or otherwise. Putting in a low-energy lamp mean that there is less heat being put into the room, and consequently, more heat has to be supplied externally. The only way that Low Energy lighting makes a positive difference is if people change their lamps when they stop using external heating. As in Northern Europe we usually have to have our heating on for at least 7 months of the year, typically 8 months, low energy lighting doesn't make a lot of sense. Also, how much energy does it take to make a low-energy lamp compared with a conventional one? When this is factored in, together with the extra energy required to dispose of it safely, I doubt very much whether low-energy lighting helps at all. S. -- http://audiopages.googlepages.com |
#58
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![]() Serge Auckland wrote: Quite apart from the problems of disposing of old CFLs, I question the whole principle of Low Energy lighting. If you have a conventional bulb, much of the energy output is in the form of heat, which will help heat the room, and consequently will reduce the need for other heating, central or otherwise. That's sort of fine if you want extra heat. Often as not you don't. The other downside of your idea is that electricity is more costly than other heat sources (often by a large amount). No, that's no excuse for low efficiency lighting. Graham |
#59
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![]() "Eeyore" wrote in message ... Serge Auckland wrote: Quite apart from the problems of disposing of old CFLs, I question the whole principle of Low Energy lighting. If you have a conventional bulb, much of the energy output is in the form of heat, which will help heat the room, and consequently will reduce the need for other heating, central or otherwise. That's sort of fine if you want extra heat. Often as not you don't. The other downside of your idea is that electricity is more costly than other heat sources (often by a large amount). No, that's no excuse for low efficiency lighting. Graham While I generally agree with your comment above, there is still a lot of hype on this topic because people (an especially politicians) fail to consider the total energy equation. This is especially true here in the U.S. where ethanol is a big topic. The public does not realize that the savings are relatively small. The BTU content/unit volume is about 70% of gasoline (lower miles/gallon), it takes a lot of energy to make it (fertilizer, fuel for planting, cultivating, harvesting, distilling), the diversion of corn to ethanol is driving up prices for animal feed and therefore milk and meat, and if all corn was turned into ethanol you may divert 3% of the total energy use in this country. If it was not subsidized by the taxpayers, no one would use it. The 3% number is higher if you only consider the energy from oil, but we are looking for solutions for the CO2 problem and you have to count all fossil fuels including natural gas and coal. Where are we going to get the holy grail of hydrogen for our cars? Yes, it takes energy to create it. Solar cells for home use are another myth. It takes more energy to produce the solar panels, batteries, and all of the auxiliary equipment than the system will ever generate. Large scale applications in areas with high solar illumination have a much better equation. I could go on, but you get the idea. The switch to more efficient lighting is a good conversation measure, but the energy production area is where the hype sets in. In general energy use is directly proportional to population and standard of living. The best way to save energy to reduce one or both of those. Alternatively we could create the necessary energy form nuclear power which has essentially zero carbon emissions. David |
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On 26 Jun, 14:17, "Arfa Daily" wrote:
"JANA" wrote in message ... If the switch that is series with the light bulb has a night light in it, the current pass of the night light will cause the CFL to flicker. If the CFL is connected to a switch that is electronic, the small leakage of the electronics will cause the CFL to flicker or in some cases to not turn off. Regular CFL's cannot be used on standard light dimmers and many of the electronic timers. This is a big inconvenience for many people. When regular lamps become unavailable, I can see a lot of problems with these new types of lamps. The biggest one will be the pollution from their disposal. They use mercury, phosphors, and many types of materials that are very harmful for the environment. There is also the electronics circuit board, which contain components that have the same recycling problem as used in most electronics. Even though they last longer, when they are eventually put out in to the garbage, they will eventually end up in the land fills. They are going to be a very big problem compared to the simple light bulb that was made of simple glass and metals. Regular light bulb materials are about 85% recyclable. There are almost no materials in these that are bad for the environment. Most CFL's materials are not recyclable, and their materials are very polluting. It looks very strong that the government is pushing the CFL's to save some electricity to sell to large industry. This is the only answer that is logical. There are NO green house gasses from using regular light bulbs. When more electricity is sold to industry, the pollution problems from its generation will actually increase, unless the generation is from water power, or nuclear power. -- JANA _____ These are my (well known) views also, but I fear we are squeaking like little lost mice in the dark ... The general public are not told - and would not understand anyway - the wider implications of these knee-jerk government interventions in our lives. All too often, they are poorly thought through, and are dreamed up as a response to the latest bit of pseudo science to hit the news stands. At the moment, anything with the words 'green' or 'eco' or 'environment' or 'global warming' are fair game for this sort of nonsense, and to add to its 'validity' in the public's eyes, they've already started inventing new bits of techno-babble like 'carbon footprint' and 'carbon offsetting' to justify what amounts to little more than opinions by a vociferous band of scientists getting paid large amounts of money and credibility ratings, to promote the government line. As you say, these CFLs are just trading one form of alleged pollution, for another definite one ... I also have qualms about the overall value of these bulbs. They are complex devices and I have not heard of any schemes for recycling or safe disposal. It is very hard, as an end user, to judge the pros and cons. From a selfish point of view, I can look at the cost to me. The low energy bulbs cost considerably more. The hope is that the longer lifetime and lower energy use compensate for this. The longer lifetime seems to be linked to the physical size. The larger ones do indeed seem to have a long life. The first ever ones I bought, about 15 years ago, are still working but they are huge by modern standards. The larger of the newer ones have a good life time but I have had a few failures. The small new ones, which are required for some applications, seem to have a noticeably shorter life time. In this case, is not so obvious that I am spending less on the bulbs than on incandescent ones. Also, I find the energy saving not as great as claimed. I usually don't find them as bright as the claimed equivalents. I guess that the equivalence claims are true in some sense but not in my subjective judgment. If I replace an incandescent bulb with a low energy with the same claimed equivalent power, it usually looks dimmer. I often have to buy one step up from the claimed equivalent power and hence make a smaller saving. An exception to this last point is the one that inspired this thread. It actually seems brighter than the incandescent that it replaced despite having the same claimed equivalent power. Of course, I have no idea of the life time yet. On the heating point that same raise. I am aware that the heat from the incandescent bulbs will be slightly reducing the heat required from other sources. However, even here in the UK, I am not running the heating all the time, and electricity costs me more per joule than gas. Even when using the heating, I like the cooler running of the low energy bulbs, I hope that it reduces the fire risk in some of the cramped places that bulbs are used. I have seen lamp shades scorched quite worryingly by incandescent bulbs (even when within the stated limits of the shade). I have never seen this with a low energy bulb. Finally, not everyone lives in a cold country. I have a house in the Philippines, there heating is unknown but air conditioning is desirable. The stray heat from incandescent bulbs is a double waste since it is increasing the load on the air conditioning. I have dropped the long list of apparently irrelevant groups. -- Seán Ó Leathlóbhair |
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![]() David wrote: While I generally agree with your comment above, there is still a lot of hype on this topic because people (an especially politicians) fail to consider the total energy equation. This is especially true here in the U.S. where ethanol is a big topic. The public does not realize that the savings are relatively small. The BTU content/unit volume is about 70% of gasoline (lower miles/gallon), it takes a lot of energy to make it (fertilizer, fuel for planting, cultivating, harvesting, distilling), the diversion of corn to ethanol is driving up prices for animal feed and therefore milk and meat, and if all corn was turned into ethanol you may divert 3% of the total energy use in this country. The idea of making ethanol fuel from corn is unique to the USA. I hear ADM regularly named as the culprit here. Far better to use feedstock that doesn't require intensive agriculture. Is your newsreader set to a line length of about 30 chars or so btw ? Graham |
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![]() Seán O'Leathlóbhair wrote: The low energy bulbs cost considerably more. I can buy 11 and 18W Philips CFLs for 39p (78 cents US) in the local supermarket. I think they're subsidised by the local electricity company in some 'green' initiative. A traditional incandescent costs about the same or more. Graham |
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![]() Seán O'Leathlóbhair wrote: from other sources. However, even here in the UK You're in the UK ! Go to Morrisons for the cheap Philips CFLs. Graham |
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On 26 Jun, 17:03, Eeyore
wrote: Seán O'Leathlóbhair wrote: from other sources. However, even here in the UK You're in the UK ! Go to Morrisons for the cheap Philips CFLs. Graham Thanks for the tip. -- Seán Ó Leathlóbhair |
#65
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![]() "Eeyore" wrote in message ... Serge Auckland wrote: Quite apart from the problems of disposing of old CFLs, I question the whole principle of Low Energy lighting. If you have a conventional bulb, much of the energy output is in the form of heat, which will help heat the room, and consequently will reduce the need for other heating, central or otherwise. That's sort of fine if you want extra heat. Often as not you don't. If the central heating is on, then you are, by definition, needing extra heat. The heat output from lighting will mean that the room thermostat (or radiator valves) will turn off that bit sooner. The other downside of your idea is that electricity is more costly than other heat sources (often by a large amount). Agreed , but cost isn't part of my argument, energy usage is. The end to end energy costs of low energy lighting, that is, the energy to make them, use them and dispose of them compared with conventional filament lighting isn't at all clear. I have not seen any such figures published, only for the energy consumption in use, which is clearly lower, but again, the energy re-use as heat doesn't seem to be taken into account in any calculation I've seen.. No, that's no excuse for low efficiency lighting. Graham It's not an excuse, but to me the case isn't completely made. In my own home, any light that is on for more than an hour a day is a low energy light, but that's more an act of faith on my part rather than a soundly calculated decision. S. -- http://audiopages.googlepages.com |
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Eeyore wrote in
: Serge Auckland wrote: Quite apart from the problems of disposing of old CFLs, I question the whole principle of Low Energy lighting. If you have a conventional bulb, much of the energy output is in the form of heat, which will help heat the room, and consequently will reduce the need for other heating, central or otherwise. That's sort of fine if you want extra heat. Often as not you don't. The other downside of your idea is that electricity is more costly than other heat sources (often by a large amount). No, that's no excuse for low efficiency lighting. It wasn't an excuse, it was a reason, and a good one, there was more to his point than you quoted. Most times light is used, heat is also wanted. Where it isn't, you use a light source that doesn't add heat, and there are several choices. LED's in outdoor and tunnel and other places where people don't need to spend time keeping warm, or any of the other types already in use, but that's not where people spend most of their time. The current availability of CFL's is no excuse to risk vast pollution and ebergy use in manufacture for all the general domestic uses that also need heat, and this is true before you begin to consider all the dimmers that must be replaced and thrown away. If you're looking for excuses, at least look in the right place. Trying to force an end to the incandescent lamp to satify a political expedient is not engineering, but an excuse. No matter how people heat their homes, the important thing is not to let it all out of the roofs, doors and windows, it's less important where it comes from. |
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Seán O'Leathlóbhair wrote in
oups.com: snip I also have qualms about the overall value of these bulbs. They are complex devices and I have not heard of any schemes for recycling or safe disposal. It is very hard, as an end user, to judge the pros and cons. From a selfish point of view, I can look at the cost to me. The low energy bulbs cost considerably more. The hope is that the longer lifetime and lower energy use compensate for this. The longer lifetime seems to be linked to the physical size. The larger ones do indeed seem to have a long life. The first ever ones I bought, about 15 years ago, are still working but they are huge by modern standards. The larger of the newer ones have a good life time but I have had a few failures. The small new ones, which are required for some applications, seem to have a noticeably shorter life time. In this case, is not so obvious that I am spending less on the bulbs than on incandescent ones. Also, I find the energy saving not as great as claimed. I usually don't find them as bright as the claimed equivalents. I guess that the equivalence claims are true in some sense but not in my subjective judgment. If I replace an incandescent bulb with a low energy with the same claimed equivalent power, it usually looks dimmer. I often have to buy one step up from the claimed equivalent power and hence make a smaller saving. An exception to this last point is the one that inspired this thread. It actually seems brighter than the incandescent that it replaced despite having the same claimed equivalent power. Of course, I have no idea of the life time yet. On the heating point that same raise. I am aware that the heat from the incandescent bulbs will be slightly reducing the heat required from other sources. However, even here in the UK, I am not running the heating all the time, and electricity costs me more per joule than gas. Even when using the heating, I like the cooler running of the low energy bulbs, I hope that it reduces the fire risk in some of the cramped places that bulbs are used. I have seen lamp shades scorched quite worryingly by incandescent bulbs (even when within the stated limits of the shade). I have never seen this with a low energy bulb. Finally, not everyone lives in a cold country. I have a house in the Philippines, there heating is unknown but air conditioning is desirable. The stray heat from incandescent bulbs is a double waste since it is increasing the load on the air conditioning. I have dropped the long list of apparently irrelevant groups. -- Seán Ó Leathlóbhair I think CFL's just don't wash.. I have bought several in various price ranges... The really cheep ones only last about 3 months... The medium priced ones last about 1 year to 18 months. The one I paid the most for has been going for about 5 years. Based on this it only makes sense to buy the longest lasting ones... At $22.00 US I could buy aproximately 88, 60W 120V lamps. Which gives me 88,000 hours of light. The life of the lamp that has lated five years was promoted at 30,000 hours... So that makes the inital cost about 1.5 times as much as the standard bulb. I also use 2, 100w 120 lamps as a heat source to keep the water pipes from freezing in really cold weather... I haven't figured out a safer or more economical way to heat a 5' x 5' pump house. R! |
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I think our polititions are afraid to tell the American public how
fast/serious the worlds energy is being depleated. The mercury issue can be solved as suerage is now. This could be fixed overnight. Almost all of the CFLs will be made in Asia. Not many are made in the US now. Asia competes with Europe. The US is not in the running. The best CFL is now Philips. Ray |
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On Jun 25, 8:03 am, Seán O'Leathlóbhair wrote:
I am not sure if this is an appropriate group for this question. If not, please suggest a better one. I have a light in the house which I have wanted to switch to a low energy bulb for a long time. The hold up was that I needed a very small bulb. At last, I have found a small enough bulb but something odd occurred as soon as I put it in. When it is switched on, it works as expected. When it is switched off, it blinks every few seconds. So, I guess that there must be a problem with the switch If it is passing nothing then it would seem impossible for the bulb to do anything. I did not notice any problem with the previous incandescent bulb but I guess that if the switch is leaking a tiny amount, the filament would glow too little to be seen. I have a few questions: What is going on? Is a tiny current leaking, building up a charge in a capacitor somewhere until a sufficient voltage builds up to spark in the bulb and discharge the capacitor, and then the cycle repeats. Is it safe? Will it wear out the bulb very fast? Is it likely to be enough to replace the switch? (Actually three switches can turn this bulb on and off). Might I have to replace the wiring? (Much harder than just replacing the switches) -- Seán Ó Leathlóbhair You have a more complicated circuit than you think. If you have 3 switches, each capable of turning the lamp on and off irrespective of the positions of the other two switches, then the switches are not directly connected to the lamp. The switches are connected to a (-n electromechanical) relay or a solid-state relay. The relay provides power to the lamp...the switches control the relay. I suspect leakage somewhere in wiring between the switch(s) and the relay...which, if solid-state, may require only a few milliamps to trip the relay. Could also be that the control relay is defective somehow... |
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![]() Ray King wrote: I think our polititions are afraid to tell the American public how fast/serious the worlds energy is being depleated. How about you tell me ? I'm all ears. Graham |
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On Jun 26, 10:25 pm, webpa wrote:
On Jun 25, 8:03 am, Seán O'Leathlóbhair wrote: I am not sure if this is an appropriate group for this question. If not, please suggest a better one. I have a light in the house which I have wanted to switch to a low energy bulb for a long time. The hold up was that I needed a very small bulb. At last, I have found a small enough bulb but something odd occurred as soon as I put it in. When it is switched on, it works as expected. When it is switched off, it blinks every few seconds. So, I guess that there must be a problem with the switch If it is passing nothing then it would seem impossible for the bulb to do anything. I did not notice any problem with the previous incandescent bulb but I guess that if the switch is leaking a tiny amount, the filament would glow too little to be seen. I have a few questions: What is going on? Is a tiny current leaking, building up a charge in a capacitor somewhere until a sufficient voltage builds up to spark in the bulb and discharge the capacitor, and then the cycle repeats. Is it safe? Will it wear out the bulb very fast? Is it likely to be enough to replace the switch? (Actually three switches can turn this bulb on and off). Might I have to replace the wiring? (Much harder than just replacing the switches) -- Seán Ó Leathlóbhair You have a more complicated circuit than you think. If you have 3 switches, each capable of turning the lamp on and off irrespective of the positions of the other two switches, then the switches are not directly connected to the lamp. The switches are connected to a (-n electromechanical) relay or a solid-state relay. The relay provides power to the lamp...the switches control the relay. I suspect leakage somewhere in wiring between the switch(s) and the relay...which, if solid-state, may require only a few milliamps to trip the relay. Could also be that the control relay is defective somehow. More complicated than the common two switch set-up but not necessarily that complicated. I have not traced the wiring to be sure how this particular installation works but I am reasonably sure that it does not involve a relay. I have researched how it may work and I have described that elsewhere in the thread. The switches need to be more complicated than typical. They need two inputs and two outputs. Each input is always connected to one of the outputs but the connections are reversed when the switch is changed. The live goes to one input of the first switch. The two outputs of the first switch are connected to the two inputs of the second. This continues through as many switches as you wish. Finally one output of the last switch is connected to the bulb. The neutral is connected normally. So, if any switch is changed, the live will go down the other wire through the rest of the system. Since only one output of the last switch is connected to the bulb, if it was on, it goes off but of it was off it goes on. This set-up is rare in the UK but the necessary switches are available, I have seen them in my local hardware shop. They can be used for the more typical two switch set-up by simply ignoring one of the terminals. I have read that this set-up is more commonly used in some other countries such as Spain. -- Seán Ó Leathlóbhair |
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![]() Serge Auckland wrote: "Eeyore" wrote Serge Auckland wrote: Quite apart from the problems of disposing of old CFLs, I question the whole principle of Low Energy lighting. If you have a conventional bulb, much of the energy output is in the form of heat, which will help heat the room, and consequently will reduce the need for other heating, central or otherwise. That's sort of fine if you want extra heat. Often as not you don't. If the central heating is on, then you are, by definition, needing extra heat. The heat output from lighting will mean that the room thermostat (or radiator valves) will turn off that bit sooner. Not really. The heat from most lamps hangs around at ceiling level. It does sod all to warm a room. I suggest you compare sitting in front of a 1kw bar electric fire to switching on ten 100w light bulbs to see how true that is. Graham |
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On Tue, 26 Jun 2007 02:06:02 -0700, Seán O'Leathlóbhair
put finger to keyboard and composed: I can also use a multimeter and one of those neon screwdrivers to perform some more tests. Sticking the probes of the multimeter into the light socket sounds a little scary. This is a UK lamp socket which may be unfamiliar to US readers and some others. The bulb does not screw in it is a bayonet mount. You push the bulb in and turn and a couple or prongs catch the mount and hold the bulb. The contacts are two sprung pins which press onto contacts at the bottom of the bulb. The collar is metal. To UK readers and others who know the system: is the collar connected to anything? If my multimeter probe touches a contact and the collar, is something nasty going to happen? Obviously if both probes touch their contacts and the collar, something nasty may happen. I've just checked the Australian fittings. Our new batten holders have bakelite collars, but the old ones were metal. There is no continuity between the collar and any other terminal, including the earth terminal (which doesn't exist on some fittings). - Franc Zabkar -- Please remove one 'i' from my address when replying by email. |
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On Tue, 26 Jun 2007 07:50:35 -0400, "JANA"
put finger to keyboard and composed: When regular lamps become unavailable, I can see a lot of problems with these new types of lamps. The biggest one will be the pollution from their disposal. They use mercury, phosphors, and many types of materials that are very harmful for the environment. There is also the electronics circuit board, which contain components that have the same recycling problem as used in most electronics. Even though they last longer, when they are eventually put out in to the garbage, they will eventually end up in the land fills. They are going to be a very big problem compared to the simple light bulb that was made of simple glass and metals. Regular light bulb materials are about 85% recyclable. There are almost no materials in these that are bad for the environment. Most CFL's materials are not recyclable, and their materials are very polluting. I'm also cynical about the "green" benefits of CFLs, but I found this interesting document that claims that incandescent bulbs are responsible for more mercury than CFLs. US Environmental Protection Agency fact sheet http://www.nema.org/lamprecycle/epafactsheet-cfl.pdf CFLs Responsible for Less Mercury than Incandescent Light Bulbs "Ironically, CFLs present an opportunity to prevent mercury from entering our air, where it most affects our health. The highest source of mercury in our air comes from burning fossil fuels such as coal, the most common fuel used in the U.S. to produce electricity. A CFL uses 75% less energy than an incandescent light bulb and lasts at least 6 times longer. A power plant will emit 10mg of mercury to produce the electricity to run an incandescent bulb compared to only 2.4mg of mercury to run a CFL for the same time." - Franc Zabkar -- Please remove one 'i' from my address when replying by email. |
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On Wed, 27 Jun 2007 08:32:17 +1000, Franc Zabkar
wrote: I've just checked the Australian fittings. Our new batten holders have bakelite collars, but the old ones were metal. There is no continuity between the collar and any other terminal, including the earth terminal (which doesn't exist on some fittings). - Franc Zabkar That is true Frank, but often the ring is earthed which effectively connects it to the neutral pin of the socket. Easiest way is to make a lead which plugs into the socket, and then you have access to the test leads in a more controllable situation than probing into the socket itself. Peter Dettmann |
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![]() "Eeyore" wrote in message ... Serge Auckland wrote: "Eeyore" wrote Serge Auckland wrote: Quite apart from the problems of disposing of old CFLs, I question the whole principle of Low Energy lighting. If you have a conventional bulb, much of the energy output is in the form of heat, which will help heat the room, and consequently will reduce the need for other heating, central or otherwise. That's sort of fine if you want extra heat. Often as not you don't. If the central heating is on, then you are, by definition, needing extra heat. The heat output from lighting will mean that the room thermostat (or radiator valves) will turn off that bit sooner. Not really. The heat from most lamps hangs around at ceiling level. It does sod all to warm a room. I suggest you compare sitting in front of a 1kw bar electric fire to switching on ten 100w light bulbs to see how true that is. Look at all the energy that is wasted producing light! :-) |
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![]() "Eeyore" wrote in message ... Serge Auckland wrote: "Eeyore" wrote Serge Auckland wrote: Quite apart from the problems of disposing of old CFLs, I question the whole principle of Low Energy lighting. If you have a conventional bulb, much of the energy output is in the form of heat, which will help heat the room, and consequently will reduce the need for other heating, central or otherwise. That's sort of fine if you want extra heat. Often as not you don't. If the central heating is on, then you are, by definition, needing extra heat. The heat output from lighting will mean that the room thermostat (or radiator valves) will turn off that bit sooner. Not really. The heat from most lamps hangs around at ceiling level. It does sod all to warm a room. I suggest you compare sitting in front of a 1kw bar electric fire to switching on ten 100w light bulbs to see how true that is. Graham I'm not so sure about that. Go to downtown Vegas and walk under the entrance awnings of some of the 'legacy' casinos that still have incandescent lighting rather than LEDs, and then tell me that it doesn't feel like having an electric fire a few feet over your head ... Arfa |
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![]() "Richard Crowley" wrote in message ... "Eeyore" wrote in message ... Serge Auckland wrote: "Eeyore" wrote Serge Auckland wrote: Quite apart from the problems of disposing of old CFLs, I question the whole principle of Low Energy lighting. If you have a conventional bulb, much of the energy output is in the form of heat, which will help heat the room, and consequently will reduce the need for other heating, central or otherwise. That's sort of fine if you want extra heat. Often as not you don't. If the central heating is on, then you are, by definition, needing extra heat. The heat output from lighting will mean that the room thermostat (or radiator valves) will turn off that bit sooner. Not really. The heat from most lamps hangs around at ceiling level. It does sod all to warm a room. I suggest you compare sitting in front of a 1kw bar electric fire to switching on ten 100w light bulbs to see how true that is. Look at all the energy that is wasted producing light! :-) What happens to all the 'waste' heat produced in vacuum "filled" bulbs that used to be, if not still are, produced for garden use ? It can't be radiated into the atmosphere, as the envelope is substantially cold to the touch. Does the fact that it must be hanging around in the vicinity of the filament, modify the power consumption of the lamp compared to its light output ? Does this make it a low(er) energy lamp? Why does the heat from the anode of a power tube readily radiate across the vacuum, but the heat from the filament of a vacuum light bulb seems not to? d;~} Arfa |
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webpa writes:
On Jun 25, 8:03 am, Se=E1n O'Leathl=F3bhair wrote: I am not sure if this is an appropriate group for this question. If not, please suggest a better one. I have a light in the house which I have wanted to switch to a low energy bulb for a long time. The hold up was that I needed a very small bulb. At last, I have found a small enough bulb but something odd occurred as soon as I put it in. When it is switched on, it works as expected. When it is switched off, it blinks every few seconds. So, I guess that there must be a problem with the switch If it is passing nothing then it would seem impossible for the bulb to do anything. I did not notice any problem with the previous incandescent bulb but I guess that if the switch is leaking a tiny amount, the filament would glow too little to be seen. I have a few questions: What is going on? Is a tiny current leaking, building up a charge in a capacitor somewhere until a sufficient voltage builds up to spark in the bulb and discharge the capacitor, and then the cycle repeats. Is it safe? Will it wear out the bulb very fast? Is it likely to be enough to replace the switch? (Actually three switches can turn this bulb on and off). Might I have to replace the wiring? (Much harder than just replacing the switches) -- Se=E1n =D3 Leathl=F3bhair You have a more complicated circuit than you think. If you have 3 switches, each capable of turning the lamp on and off irrespective of the positions of the other two switches, then the switches are not directly connected to the lamp. The switches are connected to a (-n electromechanical) relay or a solid-state relay. The relay provides power to the lamp...the switches control the relay. I suspect leakage somewhere in wiring between the switch(s) and the relay...which, if solid-state, may require only a few milliamps to trip the relay. Could also be that the control relay is defective somehow... No, they only need be mechanical switches. Google "3-way switch" and "4-way switch". Or see the info at: http://www.repairfaq.org/sam/appfaq.htm#afconfofm --- sam | Sci.Electronics.Repair FAQ: http://www.repairfaq.org/ Repair | Main Table of Contents: http://www.repairfaq.org/REPAIR/ +Lasers | Sam's Laser FAQ: http://www.repairfaq.org/sam/lasersam.htm | Mirror Sites: http://www.repairfaq.org/REPAIR/F_mirror.html Important: Anything sent to the email address in the message header above is ignored unless my full name AND either lasers or electronics is included in the subject line. Or, you can contact me via the Feedback Form in the FAQs. |
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![]() "R!" wrote in message ... Seán O'Leathlóbhair wrote in oups.com: snip I also have qualms about the overall value of these bulbs. They are complex devices and I have not heard of any schemes for recycling or safe disposal. It is very hard, as an end user, to judge the pros and cons. From a selfish point of view, I can look at the cost to me. The low energy bulbs cost considerably more. The hope is that the longer lifetime and lower energy use compensate for this. The longer lifetime seems to be linked to the physical size. The larger ones do indeed seem to have a long life. The first ever ones I bought, about 15 years ago, are still working but they are huge by modern standards. The larger of the newer ones have a good life time but I have had a few failures. The small new ones, which are required for some applications, seem to have a noticeably shorter life time. In this case, is not so obvious that I am spending less on the bulbs than on incandescent ones. Also, I find the energy saving not as great as claimed. I usually don't find them as bright as the claimed equivalents. I guess that the equivalence claims are true in some sense but not in my subjective judgment. If I replace an incandescent bulb with a low energy with the same claimed equivalent power, it usually looks dimmer. I often have to buy one step up from the claimed equivalent power and hence make a smaller saving. An exception to this last point is the one that inspired this thread. It actually seems brighter than the incandescent that it replaced despite having the same claimed equivalent power. Of course, I have no idea of the life time yet. On the heating point that same raise. I am aware that the heat from the incandescent bulbs will be slightly reducing the heat required from other sources. However, even here in the UK, I am not running the heating all the time, and electricity costs me more per joule than gas. Even when using the heating, I like the cooler running of the low energy bulbs, I hope that it reduces the fire risk in some of the cramped places that bulbs are used. I have seen lamp shades scorched quite worryingly by incandescent bulbs (even when within the stated limits of the shade). I have never seen this with a low energy bulb. Finally, not everyone lives in a cold country. I have a house in the Philippines, there heating is unknown but air conditioning is desirable. The stray heat from incandescent bulbs is a double waste since it is increasing the load on the air conditioning. I have dropped the long list of apparently irrelevant groups. -- Seán Ó Leathlóbhair I think CFL's just don't wash.. I have bought several in various price ranges... The really cheep ones only last about 3 months... The medium priced ones last about 1 year to 18 months. The one I paid the most for has been going for about 5 years. Based on this it only makes sense to buy the longest lasting ones... At $22.00 US I could buy aproximately 88, 60W 120V lamps. Which gives me 88,000 hours of light. The life of the lamp that has lated five years was promoted at 30,000 hours... So that makes the inital cost about 1.5 times as much as the standard bulb. I also use 2, 100w 120 lamps as a heat source to keep the water pipes from freezing in really cold weather... I haven't figured out a safer or more economical way to heat a 5' x 5' pump house. R! Remember also that incandescent lamp lifetime is a cost / commercial thing. Extra long life lamps for critical locations are available. Just another little spanner in the works. When the governments try to actually introduce the ban on incandescents, will it just be on 'conventional' spheres, or will they try to do it for halogen and spot decorative lamps as well? I would think that there is a huge useage of these lamps now, since all the big DIY warehouses started selling both fancy light fittings with multiple halogens in them, and cheap ceiling downlighter kits, with 3 or 5 halogens in them. I have two light fittings in my lounge with five 20 watt halogens in each, plus two 60 watt spots. Over my stairs, I have five ceiling downlighters, and then another five along the upstairs corridor. There are another three in the main bedroom, and four in the shower room. If these lamps get banned as well, then I'm either going to have a lot of useless holes in the ceiling, or going to have to replace them with poor colourmatch LED fixtures ... Arfa |
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