Christmas lights
I've been reading the other thread about Quartz halogen lamps and have
found it very interesting. However since this is a bit off that track I've started this new thread. I seems like in the last few years it has become impossible to buy small Christmas light series strings that have conventional lamps in them. IE: When a filament goes out they all go out. I've noticed that "something" happens to these new lamps that effectively makes them a dead short when the filament opens. This then maintains the continuity of the string and keeps the other lamps lit. But of course this comes with a high price. A higher voltage is placed across each of the remaining good lamps when this happens. Little by little as they over cook, and each filament reaches the premature end of it's life and opens, that lamp is essentially replaced by another dead short, thereby running the remaining good filaments at even a higher voltage. Naturally catastrophic failure of all the rest of the string is inevitable and systematically occurs unless this "shorting" action fails on a particular lamp and it actually "opens". Then the remaining lamps are spared. I know this is what's happening because I've tried to repair several strings like this. Last night I looked at two identical 50 lamp strings. One had about six lamps out with one open. There were 35 lamps out on the other, all with with shorts across them except for one that was "open". The remaining lamps were still good. My wife seems to think that not having all the lights go out when one filament opens represents convenience, and trying to explain series circuit theory to her is an exercise in futility. So anyhow I now have one string which I've added 8 additional lamps to for a total of 58 2.4 V lamps on it. It runs a bit dimmer but it should last a lot longer. I also now have a few spare lamps as well. As much as it ****es me off you have to give the Chinese credit for figuring out a way to sell more Christmas lights under the guise of "convenience". Does anyone know what is actually happening in these lamps to turn an open filament into a dead short and begin this "runaway" effect? Lenny |
Christmas lights
"klem kedidelhopper" wrote in message ... I've been reading the other thread about Quartz halogen lamps and have found it very interesting. However since this is a bit off that track I've started this new thread. I seems like in the last few years it has become impossible to buy small Christmas light series strings that have conventional lamps in them. IE: When a filament goes out they all go out. I've noticed that "something" happens to these new lamps that effectively makes them a dead short when the filament opens. This then maintains the continuity of the string and keeps the other lamps lit. But of course this comes with a high price. A higher voltage is placed across each of the remaining good lamps when this happens. Little by little as they over cook, and each filament reaches the premature end of it's life and opens, that lamp is essentially replaced by another dead short, thereby running the remaining good filaments at even a higher voltage. Naturally catastrophic failure of all the rest of the string is inevitable and systematically occurs unless this "shorting" action fails on a particular lamp and it actually "opens". Then the remaining lamps are spared. I know this is what's happening because I've tried to repair several strings like this. Last night I looked at two identical 50 lamp strings. One had about six lamps out with one open. There were 35 lamps out on the other, all with with shorts across them except for one that was "open". The remaining lamps were still good. My wife seems to think that not having all the lights go out when one filament opens represents convenience, and trying to explain series circuit theory to her is an exercise in futility. So anyhow I now have one string which I've added 8 additional lamps to for a total of 58 2.4 V lamps on it. It runs a bit dimmer but it should last a lot longer. I also now have a few spare lamps as well. As much as it ****es me off you have to give the Chinese credit for figuring out a way to sell more Christmas lights under the guise of "convenience". Does anyone know what is actually happening in these lamps to turn an open filament into a dead short and begin this "runaway" effect? Lenny http://people.howstuffworks.com/cult...as-lights1.htm That reminds me - when I was about 11, our christmas tree lights failed due to a faulty bulb socket rather than a bulb. I thought I'd be dead clever, and find the faulty socket by, carefully pushing pins through the isulation either side, and touching them together to bypass the socket, all while connected to the mains. The method actually worked, and I found my dead socket without getting shocked. Hurrah. So I cut the wires either side of the socket. Then bared one end, then bared the other end, and picked up the two ends, one in each hand, to twist them together. Only I'd forgotten to unplug the mains. I got 240v straight through my chest. I was squatting down at the time, and my legs spasmed and shot me backwards halfway across the room. It was about 5 minutes before my heart calmed down enough to be able to breathe properly. Christmas? bah, humbug, its dangerous. Gareth. |
Christmas lights
On Dec 18, 11:38*am, "Gareth Magennis"
wrote: "klem kedidelhopper" wrote in message ... I've been reading the other thread about Quartz halogen lamps and have found it very interesting. However since this is a bit off that track I've started this new thread. I seems like in the last few years it has become impossible to buy small Christmas light series strings that have conventional lamps in them. IE: When a filament goes out they all go out. I've noticed that "something" happens to these *new lamps that effectively makes them a dead short when the filament opens. This then maintains the continuity of the string and keeps the other lamps lit. But of course this comes with a high price. A higher voltage is placed across each of the remaining good lamps when this happens. Little by little as they over cook, and each filament reaches the premature end of it's life and opens, that lamp is essentially replaced by another dead short, thereby running the remaining good filaments at even a higher voltage. Naturally catastrophic failure of all the rest of the string is inevitable and systematically occurs unless this "shorting" action fails on a particular lamp and it actually "opens". Then the remaining lamps are spared. I know this is what's happening because I've tried to repair several strings like this. Last night I looked at two identical 50 lamp strings. One had about six lamps out with one open. There were 35 lamps out on the other, all with with shorts across them except for one that was "open". The remaining lamps were still good. My wife seems to think that not having all the lights go out when one filament opens represents convenience, and trying to explain series circuit theory to her is an exercise in futility. So anyhow I now have one string which I've added 8 additional lamps to for a total of 58 2.4 V lamps on it. It runs a bit dimmer but it should last a lot longer. I also now have a few spare lamps as well. As much as it ****es me off you have to give the Chinese credit for figuring out a way to sell more Christmas lights under the guise of "convenience". Does anyone know what is actually happening in these lamps to turn an open filament into a dead short and begin this "runaway" effect? *Lenny http://people.howstuffworks.com/cult...days/christmas... That reminds me - when I was about 11, our christmas tree lights failed due to a faulty bulb socket rather than a bulb. *I thought I'd be dead clever, and find the faulty socket by, carefully pushing pins through the isulation either side, and touching them together to bypass the socket, all while connected to the mains. The method actually worked, and I found my dead socket without getting shocked. Hurrah. So I cut the wires either side of the socket. *Then bared one end, then bared the other end, and picked up the two ends, one in each hand, to twist them together. Only I'd forgotten to unplug the mains. I got 240v straight through my chest. *I was squatting down at the time, and my legs spasmed and shot me backwards halfway across the room. *It was about 5 minutes before my heart calmed down enough to be able to breathe properly. Christmas? *bah, humbug, its dangerous. Gareth. As we say here in America you literally got "knocked on your ass". It's amazing considering some of the stunts we've all probably tried in the interest of them being a learning experience that we're still alive. I remember when I was a teenager grabbing an old tube type TV chassis off the bench on a hot Summer day. I caught 450VDC from one arm to the other. I think that the only thing that saved me and my heart was possibly the skin effect of my soaking wet sweaty Tee shirt. Lenny |
Christmas lights
On 19/12/2012 12:09 AM, klem kedidelhopper wrote:
I've been reading the other thread about Quartz halogen lamps and have found it very interesting. However since this is a bit off that track I've started this new thread. I seems like in the last few years it has become impossible to buy small Christmas light series strings that have conventional lamps in them. IE: When a filament goes out they all go out. I've noticed that "something" happens to these new lamps that effectively makes them a dead short when the filament opens. This then maintains the continuity of the string and keeps the other lamps lit. But of course this comes with a high price. A higher voltage is placed across each of the remaining good lamps when this happens. Little by little as they over cook, and each filament reaches the premature end of it's life and opens, that lamp is essentially replaced by another dead short, thereby running the remaining good filaments at even a higher voltage. Naturally catastrophic failure of all the rest of the string is inevitable and systematically occurs unless this "shorting" action fails on a particular lamp and it actually "opens". Then the remaining lamps are spared. I know this is what's happening because I've tried to repair several strings like this. Last night I looked at two identical 50 lamp strings. One had about six lamps out with one open. There were 35 lamps out on the other, all with with shorts across them except for one that was "open". The remaining lamps were still good. My wife seems to think that not having all the lights go out when one filament opens represents convenience, and trying to explain series circuit theory to her is an exercise in futility. So anyhow I now have one string which I've added 8 additional lamps to for a total of 58 2.4 V lamps on it. It runs a bit dimmer but it should last a lot longer. I also now have a few spare lamps as well. As much as it ****es me off you have to give the Chinese credit for figuring out a way to sell more Christmas lights under the guise of "convenience". Does anyone know what is actually happening in these lamps to turn an open filament into a dead short and begin this "runaway" effect? Lenny Surely the idea is to replace the blown bulb when noticed ?? Why wait until the situation you described develops ?? |
Christmas lights
Surely the idea is to replace the blown bulb when noticed ?? Why wait until the situation you described develops ?? If you notice them... These miniature lamps are usually wrapped around trees or otherwise stuffed into decorative foliage, and single lamp failures often go unnoticed unless you're specifically looking for them.. Lenny's idea of adding lamps in series is a good idea. Years ago, I had an X10 setup for holiday lighting, and would run the dimmer modules for the light strings. Just dropping the brightness a bit kept them running almost forever. My son just bought a set of similar lights that use LEDs. We'll see how long these last. |
Christmas lights
On Dec 18, 7:16*pm, John-Del wrote:
Surely the idea is to replace the blown bulb when noticed ?? Why wait until the situation you described develops ?? If you notice them... These miniature lamps are usually wrapped around trees or otherwise stuffed into decorative foliage, and single lamp failures often go unnoticed unless you're specifically looking for them.. *Lenny's idea of adding lamps in series is a good idea. *Years ago, I had an X10 setup for holiday lighting, and would run the dimmer modules for the light strings. *Just dropping the brightness a bit kept them running almost forever. My son just bought a set of similar lights that use LEDs. *We'll see how long these last. I took a good look at these lamps tonight under a magnifier, I noticed a very curious thing. At the base of each lamp the thin wires go through the bulb and attach to the posts that the filaments are then welded to; If you look into the bulb, at the base of these posts, inside each lamp there seems to be a thin wire wrapped around the posts that one would think would short them out. It obviously doesn't happen right away but after a period of time, (heating), it does seem to. Perhaps that is it's purpose, to burn through an insulating layer on the posts after a brief time and destroy the lamp. And one further observation. In looking at the filaments on all the "shorted" Kamakazi lamps It appears that the filaments never opened, rather the shorting wire must have finally burned through the posts and shorted the lamp out. What an insidious clever way to sell more Christmas lights. Isn't it fascinating the lengths that some people will go to to separate us from our money? Merry Christmas! Lenny |
Christmas lights
"klem kedidelhopper" wrote in message ... On Dec 18, 7:16 pm, John-Del wrote: Surely the idea is to replace the blown bulb when noticed ?? Why wait until the situation you described develops ?? If you notice them... These miniature lamps are usually wrapped around trees or otherwise stuffed into decorative foliage, and single lamp failures often go unnoticed unless you're specifically looking for them.. Lenny's idea of adding lamps in series is a good idea. Years ago, I had an X10 setup for holiday lighting, and would run the dimmer modules for the light strings. Just dropping the brightness a bit kept them running almost forever. My son just bought a set of similar lights that use LEDs. We'll see how long these last. I took a good look at these lamps tonight under a magnifier, I noticed a very curious thing. At the base of each lamp the thin wires go through the bulb and attach to the posts that the filaments are then welded to; If you look into the bulb, at the base of these posts, inside each lamp there seems to be a thin wire wrapped around the posts that one would think would short them out. It obviously doesn't happen right away but after a period of time, (heating), it does seem to. Perhaps that is it's purpose, to burn through an insulating layer on the posts after a brief time and destroy the lamp. And one further observation. In looking at the filaments on all the "shorted" Kamakazi lamps It appears that the filaments never opened, rather the shorting wire must have finally burned through the posts and shorted the lamp out. What an insidious clever way to sell more Christmas lights. Isn't it fascinating the lengths that some people will go to to separate us from our money? Merry Christmas! Lenny Hi Lenny, you must have mised this link I provided before my little story: http://people.howstuffworks.com/cult...as-lights1.htm That reminds me - when I was about 11, our christmas tree lights failed due Gareth. |
Christmas lights
"klem kedidelhopper" wrote in message ... On Dec 18, 7:16 pm, John-Del wrote: Surely the idea is to replace the blown bulb when noticed ?? Why wait until the situation you described develops ?? If you notice them... These miniature lamps are usually wrapped around trees or otherwise stuffed into decorative foliage, and single lamp failures often go unnoticed unless you're specifically looking for them.. Lenny's idea of adding lamps in series is a good idea. Years ago, I had an X10 setup for holiday lighting, and would run the dimmer modules for the light strings. Just dropping the brightness a bit kept them running almost forever. My son just bought a set of similar lights that use LEDs. We'll see how long these last. I took a good look at these lamps tonight under a magnifier, I noticed a very curious thing. At the base of each lamp the thin wires go through the bulb and attach to the posts that the filaments are then welded to; If you look into the bulb, at the base of these posts, inside each lamp there seems to be a thin wire wrapped around the posts that one would think would short them out. It obviously doesn't happen right away but after a period of time, (heating), it does seem to. Perhaps that is it's purpose, to burn through an insulating layer on the posts after a brief time and destroy the lamp. And one further observation. In looking at the filaments on all the "shorted" Kamakazi lamps It appears that the filaments never opened, rather the shorting wire must have finally burned through the posts and shorted the lamp out. What an insidious clever way to sell more Christmas lights. Isn't it fascinating the lengths that some people will go to to separate us from our money? Merry Christmas! Lenny Or, keep the remaining series string going even after the lamp burns out. Mark Z. |
Christmas lights
On Dec 19, 5:53*am, "Mark Zacharias"
wrote: "klem kedidelhopper" wrote in message .... On Dec 18, 7:16 pm, John-Del wrote: Surely the idea is to replace the blown bulb when noticed ?? Why wait until the situation you described develops ?? If you notice them... These miniature lamps are usually wrapped around trees or otherwise stuffed into decorative foliage, and single lamp failures often go unnoticed unless you're specifically looking for them.. Lenny's idea of adding lamps in series is a good idea. Years ago, I had an X10 setup for holiday lighting, and would run the dimmer modules for the light strings. Just dropping the brightness a bit kept them running almost forever. My son just bought a set of similar lights that use LEDs. We'll see how long these last. I took a good look at these lamps tonight under *a magnifier, I noticed a very curious thing. At the base of each lamp the thin wires go through the bulb and attach to the posts that the filaments are then welded to; If you look into the bulb, at the base of these posts, inside each lamp there seems to be a thin wire wrapped around the posts that one would think would short them out. It obviously doesn't happen right away but after a period of time, (heating), it does seem to. Perhaps that is it's purpose, to burn through an insulating layer on the posts after a brief time and destroy the lamp. And one further observation. In looking at the filaments on all the "shorted" Kamakazi lamps *It appears that the filaments never opened, rather the shorting wire must have finally burned through the posts and shorted the lamp out. What an insidious clever way to *sell more Christmas lights. Isn't it fascinating the lengths that some people will go to to separate us from our money? Merry Christmas! Lenny Or, keep the remaining series string going even after the lamp burns out. Mark Z. Thank you Gareth. I did miss that link. So it seems that my theory about the short,(shunt) was pretty much right on the money, except for one thing that is. The article mentions, as I had suspected that when the filament opens, current then flows through the shunt. This heats the shunt, thereby causing it to melt it's way into the posts and thus providing continuity to the series string. Although that does sound ingenious, as I had mentioned in my last post, upon examining each "shorted" lamp under high power magnification it appears that in almost every case all the filaments appear to be intact. That would suggest that this melting and subsequent shorting of the lamp occurred before the filament opened. Naturally I couldn't measure these filaments with the short across them to confirm this, but they do look to be mechanically sound. So I guess what it comes down to is I think that we're being screwed with these Christmas lights. As an interesting side note. I have considered using some of the surviving lamps in parallel as low voltage "street lights" and to illuminate model buildings on my Lionel train layout. I'll be sure to fuse the circuit if I do.... Lenny |
Christmas lights
On Wed, 19 Dec 2012 07:26:37 -0800 (PST), klem kedidelhopper
wrote: On Dec 19, 5:53*am, "Mark Zacharias" wrote: "klem kedidelhopper" wrote in message ... On Dec 18, 7:16 pm, John-Del wrote: Surely the idea is to replace the blown bulb when noticed ?? Why wait until the situation you described develops ?? If you notice them... These miniature lamps are usually wrapped around trees or otherwise stuffed into decorative foliage, and single lamp failures often go unnoticed unless you're specifically looking for them.. Lenny's idea of adding lamps in series is a good idea. Years ago, I had an X10 setup for holiday lighting, and would run the dimmer modules for the light strings. Just dropping the brightness a bit kept them running almost forever. My son just bought a set of similar lights that use LEDs. We'll see how long these last. I took a good look at these lamps tonight under *a magnifier, I noticed a very curious thing. At the base of each lamp the thin wires go through the bulb and attach to the posts that the filaments are then welded to; If you look into the bulb, at the base of these posts, inside each lamp there seems to be a thin wire wrapped around the posts that one would think would short them out. It obviously doesn't happen right away but after a period of time, (heating), it does seem to. Perhaps that is it's purpose, to burn through an insulating layer on the posts after a brief time and destroy the lamp. And one further observation. In looking at the filaments on all the "shorted" Kamakazi lamps *It appears that the filaments never opened, rather the shorting wire must have finally burned through the posts and shorted the lamp out. What an insidious clever way to *sell more Christmas lights. Isn't it fascinating the lengths that some people will go to to separate us from our money? Merry Christmas! Lenny Or, keep the remaining series string going even after the lamp burns out. Mark Z. Thank you Gareth. I did miss that link. So it seems that my theory about the short,(shunt) was pretty much right on the money, except for one thing that is. The article mentions, as I had suspected that when the filament opens, current then flows through the shunt. This heats the shunt, thereby causing it to melt it's way into the posts and thus providing continuity to the series string. Although that does sound ingenious, as I had mentioned in my last post, upon examining each "shorted" lamp under high power magnification it appears that in almost every case all the filaments appear to be intact. That would suggest that this melting and subsequent shorting of the lamp occurred before the filament opened. Naturally I couldn't measure these filaments with the short across them to confirm this, but they do look to be mechanically sound. So I guess what it comes down to is I think that we're being screwed with these Christmas lights. As an interesting side note. I have considered using some of the surviving lamps in parallel as low voltage "street lights" and to illuminate model buildings on my Lionel train layout. I'll be sure to fuse the circuit if I do.... Lenny One comment on this topic... These strings with the shunts are not new. They have been around for decades. When I was a child (a long time ago), they used series strings of regular bulbs. If one went out, they all did. The next advance was parallel bulbs. That solved the problem, but they were expensive. Later (1970's?), these mini bulbs with the shunts came out. I could be off on the decade, but it has been a long time. In my experience, bad connections are more common than bad shunts, but I have seen my share of actual burned out filaments, too. With the new LEDs (now that they figured out "warm" white), the only problem we will have is bad connections ;-) Pat |
Christmas lights
"Pat" wrote in message
... On Wed, 19 Dec 2012 07:26:37 -0800 (PST), klem kedidelhopper wrote: On Dec 19, 5:53 am, "Mark Zacharias" wrote: "klem kedidelhopper" wrote in message ... On Dec 18, 7:16 pm, John-Del wrote: Surely the idea is to replace the blown bulb when noticed ?? Why wait until the situation you described develops ?? If you notice them... These miniature lamps are usually wrapped around trees or otherwise stuffed into decorative foliage, and single lamp failures often go unnoticed unless you're specifically looking for them.. Lenny's idea of adding lamps in series is a good idea. Years ago, I had an X10 setup for holiday lighting, and would run the dimmer modules for the light strings. Just dropping the brightness a bit kept them running almost forever. My son just bought a set of similar lights that use LEDs. We'll see how long these last. I took a good look at these lamps tonight under a magnifier, I noticed a very curious thing. At the base of each lamp the thin wires go through the bulb and attach to the posts that the filaments are then welded to; If you look into the bulb, at the base of these posts, inside each lamp there seems to be a thin wire wrapped around the posts that one would think would short them out. It obviously doesn't happen right away but after a period of time, (heating), it does seem to. Perhaps that is it's purpose, to burn through an insulating layer on the posts after a brief time and destroy the lamp. And one further observation. In looking at the filaments on all the "shorted" Kamakazi lamps It appears that the filaments never opened, rather the shorting wire must have finally burned through the posts and shorted the lamp out. What an insidious clever way to sell more Christmas lights. Isn't it fascinating the lengths that some people will go to to separate us from our money? Merry Christmas! Lenny Or, keep the remaining series string going even after the lamp burns out. Mark Z. Thank you Gareth. I did miss that link. So it seems that my theory about the short,(shunt) was pretty much right on the money, except for one thing that is. The article mentions, as I had suspected that when the filament opens, current then flows through the shunt. This heats the shunt, thereby causing it to melt it's way into the posts and thus providing continuity to the series string. Although that does sound ingenious, as I had mentioned in my last post, upon examining each "shorted" lamp under high power magnification it appears that in almost every case all the filaments appear to be intact. That would suggest that this melting and subsequent shorting of the lamp occurred before the filament opened. Naturally I couldn't measure these filaments with the short across them to confirm this, but they do look to be mechanically sound. So I guess what it comes down to is I think that we're being screwed with these Christmas lights. As an interesting side note. I have considered using some of the surviving lamps in parallel as low voltage "street lights" and to illuminate model buildings on my Lionel train layout. I'll be sure to fuse the circuit if I do.... Lenny One comment on this topic... These strings with the shunts are not new. They have been around for decades. When I was a child (a long time ago), they used series strings of regular bulbs. If one went out, they all did. The next advance was parallel bulbs. That solved the problem, but they were expensive. Later (1970's?), these mini bulbs with the shunts came out. I could be off on the decade, but it has been a long time. In my experience, bad connections are more common than bad shunts, but I have seen my share of actual burned out filaments, too. With the new LEDs (now that they figured out "warm" white), the only problem we will have is bad connections ;-) Pat And *really* crap quality LED's that have a shorter run life than the lamps did. I have had more than one cheap LED flashlight where up to 4 out of 9 LED's quit rather quickly, even had one even strobing at a visible rate. Bought a higher quality flashlight. About three years old now, use it daily, still OK. Mark Z. |
Christmas lights
"Mark Zacharias" wrote in message ... "Pat" wrote in message ... On Wed, 19 Dec 2012 07:26:37 -0800 (PST), klem kedidelhopper wrote: On Dec 19, 5:53 am, "Mark Zacharias" wrote: "klem kedidelhopper" wrote in message ... On Dec 18, 7:16 pm, John-Del wrote: Surely the idea is to replace the blown bulb when noticed ?? Why wait until the situation you described develops ?? If you notice them... These miniature lamps are usually wrapped around trees or otherwise stuffed into decorative foliage, and single lamp failures often go unnoticed unless you're specifically looking for them.. Lenny's idea of adding lamps in series is a good idea. Years ago, I had an X10 setup for holiday lighting, and would run the dimmer modules for the light strings. Just dropping the brightness a bit kept them running almost forever. My son just bought a set of similar lights that use LEDs. We'll see how long these last. I took a good look at these lamps tonight under a magnifier, I noticed a very curious thing. At the base of each lamp the thin wires go through the bulb and attach to the posts that the filaments are then welded to; If you look into the bulb, at the base of these posts, inside each lamp there seems to be a thin wire wrapped around the posts that one would think would short them out. It obviously doesn't happen right away but after a period of time, (heating), it does seem to. Perhaps that is it's purpose, to burn through an insulating layer on the posts after a brief time and destroy the lamp. And one further observation. In looking at the filaments on all the "shorted" Kamakazi lamps It appears that the filaments never opened, rather the shorting wire must have finally burned through the posts and shorted the lamp out. What an insidious clever way to sell more Christmas lights. Isn't it fascinating the lengths that some people will go to to separate us from our money? Merry Christmas! Lenny Or, keep the remaining series string going even after the lamp burns out. Mark Z. Thank you Gareth. I did miss that link. So it seems that my theory about the short,(shunt) was pretty much right on the money, except for one thing that is. The article mentions, as I had suspected that when the filament opens, current then flows through the shunt. This heats the shunt, thereby causing it to melt it's way into the posts and thus providing continuity to the series string. Although that does sound ingenious, as I had mentioned in my last post, upon examining each "shorted" lamp under high power magnification it appears that in almost every case all the filaments appear to be intact. That would suggest that this melting and subsequent shorting of the lamp occurred before the filament opened. Naturally I couldn't measure these filaments with the short across them to confirm this, but they do look to be mechanically sound. So I guess what it comes down to is I think that we're being screwed with these Christmas lights. As an interesting side note. I have considered using some of the surviving lamps in parallel as low voltage "street lights" and to illuminate model buildings on my Lionel train layout. I'll be sure to fuse the circuit if I do.... Lenny One comment on this topic... These strings with the shunts are not new. They have been around for decades. When I was a child (a long time ago), they used series strings of regular bulbs. If one went out, they all did. The next advance was parallel bulbs. That solved the problem, but they were expensive. Later (1970's?), these mini bulbs with the shunts came out. I could be off on the decade, but it has been a long time. In my experience, bad connections are more common than bad shunts, but I have seen my share of actual burned out filaments, too. With the new LEDs (now that they figured out "warm" white), the only problem we will have is bad connections ;-) Pat And *really* crap quality LED's that have a shorter run life than the lamps did. I have had more than one cheap LED flashlight where up to 4 out of 9 LED's quit rather quickly, even had one even strobing at a visible rate. Bought a higher quality flashlight. About three years old now, use it daily, still OK. Mark Z. I've had several like that. I now perceive them as cheap and disposible, which is probably their intended purpose. (I often lose them before they break anyway) Gareth. |
Christmas lights
On Dec 20, 4:19*am, "Gareth Magennis"
wrote: "Mark Zacharias" wrote in message ... "Pat" wrote in message .. . On Wed, 19 Dec 2012 07:26:37 -0800 (PST), klem kedidelhopper wrote: On Dec 19, 5:53 am, "Mark Zacharias" wrote: "klem kedidelhopper" wrote in message ... On Dec 18, 7:16 pm, John-Del wrote: Surely the idea is to replace the blown bulb when noticed ?? Why wait until the situation you described develops ?? If you notice them... These miniature lamps are usually wrapped around trees or otherwise stuffed into decorative foliage, and single lamp failures often go unnoticed unless you're specifically looking for them.. Lenny's idea of adding lamps in series is a good idea. Years ago, I had an X10 setup for holiday lighting, and would run the dimmer modules for the light strings. Just dropping the brightness a bit kept them running almost forever. My son just bought a set of similar lights that use LEDs. We'll see how long these last. I took a good look at these lamps tonight under a magnifier, I noticed a very curious thing. At the base of each lamp the thin wires go through the bulb and attach to the posts that the filaments are then welded to; If you look into the bulb, at the base of these posts, inside each lamp there seems to be a thin wire wrapped around the posts that one would think would short them out. It obviously doesn't happen right away but after a period of time, (heating), it does seem to. Perhaps that is it's purpose, to burn through an insulating layer on the posts after a brief time and destroy the lamp. And one further observation. In looking at the filaments on all the "shorted" Kamakazi lamps It appears that the filaments never opened, rather the shorting wire must have finally burned through the posts and shorted the lamp out. What an insidious clever way to sell more Christmas lights. Isn't it fascinating the lengths that some people will go to to separate us from our money? Merry Christmas! Lenny Or, keep the remaining series string going even after the lamp burns out. Mark Z. Thank you Gareth. I did miss that link. So it seems that my theory about the short,(shunt) was pretty much right on the money, except for one thing that is. The article mentions, as I had suspected that when the filament opens, current then flows through the shunt. This heats the shunt, thereby causing it to melt it's way into the posts and thus providing continuity to the series string. Although that does sound ingenious, as I had mentioned in my last post, upon examining each "shorted" lamp under high power magnification it appears that in almost every case all the filaments appear to be intact. That would suggest that this melting and subsequent shorting of the lamp occurred before the filament opened. Naturally I couldn't measure these filaments with the short across them to confirm this, but they do look to be mechanically sound. So I guess what it comes down to is I think that we're being screwed with these Christmas lights. As an interesting side note. I have considered using some of the surviving lamps in parallel as low voltage "street lights" and to illuminate model buildings on my Lionel train layout. I'll be sure to fuse the circuit if I do.... Lenny One comment on this topic... *These strings with the shunts are not new. *They have been around for decades. *When I was a child (a long time ago), they used series strings of regular bulbs. *If one went out, they all did. *The next advance was parallel bulbs. *That solved the problem, but they were expensive. *Later (1970's?), these mini bulbs with the shunts came out. *I could be off on the decade, but it has been a long time. *In my experience, bad connections are more common than bad shunts, but I have seen my share of actual burned out filaments, too. *With the new LEDs (now that they figured out "warm" white), the only problem we will have is bad connections ;-) Pat And *really* crap quality LED's that have a shorter run life than *the lamps did. I have had more than one cheap LED flashlight where up to 4 out of 9 LED's quit rather quickly, even had one even strobing at a visible rate. Bought a higher quality flashlight. About three years old now, use it daily, still OK. Mark Z. I've had several like that. I now perceive them as cheap and disposible, which is probably their intended purpose. (I often lose them before they break anyway) Gareth.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I always add a couple of extra sockets and lamps to every string of lights I own, both outsie and inside. That slows the failure rate WAY down. Then, at the end of the season,I check all the strings of lights before I put them away. THe runawa effect I have seen, it can be quite spectacular if you are there at the right time. Eventually, as the number of remaining working lights quickly reduces, eventually the current gets so high that one of the shunts fails. The shunts are actually regular wire, but with insulation that breaks down at may 50 volts. When a bulb burns out, the voltage across the open bulb rises to the supply voltage, 120 or 240, the insulation breaks down, and the shunt completes the circuit, lighting up the remaining bulbs. I also have a device from 30+ years ago that starts out high resistance and quickl, 2 -3 seconds, goes down to less than 1 ohm. This is in the supply for the lights. This prevents the high initial surge that occurs because the filaments are cold, and pretty much eliminates the initial flash / failure that we are all familiar with. |
Christmas lights
On Dec 22, 5:40*pm, "hr(bob) "
wrote: On Dec 20, 4:19*am, "Gareth Magennis" wrote: "Mark Zacharias" wrote in message .. . "Pat" wrote in message .. . On Wed, 19 Dec 2012 07:26:37 -0800 (PST), klem kedidelhopper wrote: On Dec 19, 5:53 am, "Mark Zacharias" wrote: "klem kedidelhopper" wrote in message ... On Dec 18, 7:16 pm, John-Del wrote: Surely the idea is to replace the blown bulb when noticed ?? Why wait until the situation you described develops ?? If you notice them... These miniature lamps are usually wrapped around trees or otherwise stuffed into decorative foliage, and single lamp failures often go unnoticed unless you're specifically looking for them.. Lenny's idea of adding lamps in series is a good idea. Years ago, I had an X10 setup for holiday lighting, and would run the dimmer modules for the light strings. Just dropping the brightness a bit kept them running almost forever. My son just bought a set of similar lights that use LEDs. We'll see how long these last. I took a good look at these lamps tonight under a magnifier, I noticed a very curious thing. At the base of each lamp the thin wires go through the bulb and attach to the posts that the filaments are then welded to; If you look into the bulb, at the base of these posts, inside each lamp there seems to be a thin wire wrapped around the posts that one would think would short them out. It obviously doesn't happen right away but after a period of time, (heating), it does seem to. Perhaps that is it's purpose, to burn through an insulating layer on the posts after a brief time and destroy the lamp. And one further observation. In looking at the filaments on all the "shorted" Kamakazi lamps It appears that the filaments never opened, rather the shorting wire must have finally burned through the posts and shorted the lamp out. What an insidious clever way to sell more Christmas lights. Isn't it fascinating the lengths that some people will go to to separate us from our money? Merry Christmas! Lenny Or, keep the remaining series string going even after the lamp burns out. Mark Z. Thank you Gareth. I did miss that link. So it seems that my theory about the short,(shunt) was pretty much right on the money, except for one thing that is. The article mentions, as I had suspected that when the filament opens, current then flows through the shunt. This heats the shunt, thereby causing it to melt it's way into the posts and thus providing continuity to the series string. Although that does sound ingenious, as I had mentioned in my last post, upon examining each "shorted" lamp under high power magnification it appears that in almost every case all the filaments appear to be intact. That would suggest that this melting and subsequent shorting of the lamp occurred before the filament opened. Naturally I couldn't measure these filaments with the short across them to confirm this, but they do look to be mechanically sound. So I guess what it comes down to is I think that we're being screwed with these Christmas lights. As an interesting side note. I have considered using some of the surviving lamps in parallel as low voltage "street lights" and to illuminate model buildings on my Lionel train layout. I'll be sure to fuse the circuit if I do.... Lenny One comment on this topic... *These strings with the shunts are not new. *They have been around for decades. *When I was a child (a long time ago), they used series strings of regular bulbs. *If one went out, they all did. *The next advance was parallel bulbs. *That solved the problem, but they were expensive. *Later (1970's?), these mini bulbs with the shunts came out. *I could be off on the decade, but it has been a long time. *In my experience, bad connections are more common than bad shunts, but I have seen my share of actual burned out filaments, too. *With the new LEDs (now that they figured out "warm" white), the only problem we will have is bad connections ;-) Pat And *really* crap quality LED's that have a shorter run life than *the lamps did. I have had more than one cheap LED flashlight where up to 4 out of 9 LED's quit rather quickly, even had one even strobing at a visible rate. Bought a higher quality flashlight. About three years old now, use it daily, still OK. Mark Z. I've had several like that. I now perceive them as cheap and disposible, which is probably their intended purpose. (I often lose them before they break anyway) Gareth.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I always add a couple of extra sockets and lamps to every string of lights I own, both outsie and inside. *That slows the failure rate WAY down. *Then, at the end of the season,I check all the strings of lights before I put them away. *THe runawa effect I have seen, it can be quite spectacular if you are there at the right time. *Eventually, as the number of remaining working lights quickly reduces, eventually the current gets so high that one of the shunts fails. *The shunts are actually regular wire, but with insulation that breaks down at may 50 volts. *When a bulb burns out, the voltage across the open bulb rises to the supply voltage, 120 or 240, the insulation breaks down, and the shunt completes the circuit, lighting up the remaining bulbs. I also have a device from 30+ years ago that starts out high resistance and quickl, 2 -3 seconds, *goes down to less than 1 ohm. This is in the supply for the lights. *This prevents the high initial surge that occurs because the filaments are cold, and pretty much eliminates the initial flash / failure that we are all familiar with. But no one has addressed the fact that these filaments I've observed under magnification on the bad lamps that I have pulled from this string do not seem to have opened. However the lamps indeed read dead shorted though. So just as I've suspected from the beginning the shunt must be burning it's way through the posts and rendering the lamp useless in spite of the lamp still having a good filament. Lenny |
Christmas lights
On a related topic...
Several years ago I bought one of those "magic guns" that repairs non-working lights. You plug the "dead" light into the gun and pull the trigger. A piezo striker sends a high-voltage pulse to the bulb, which often lights again. Does anyone know what's going on here? http://www.amazon.com/Keeper-01201-C.../dp/B000R8KBOK |
Christmas lights
On Sun, 23 Dec 2012 04:50:33 -0800, "William Sommerwerck"
wrote: Several years ago I bought one of those "magic guns" that repairs non-working lights. You plug the "dead" light into the gun and pull the trigger. A piezo striker sends a high-voltage pulse to the bulb, which often lights again. Does anyone know what's going on here? http://www.amazon.com/Keeper-01201-C.../dp/B000R8KBOK Their web site explains how it works: http://www.lightkeeperpro.com/How-It-Works/how-the-lightkeeper-pro-works Also, Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LightKeeper_Pro -- Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558 |
Christmas lights
On Dec 23, 9:20*am, Jeff Liebermann wrote:
On Sun, 23 Dec 2012 04:50:33 -0800, "William Sommerwerck" wrote: Several years ago I bought one of those "magic guns" that repairs non-working lights. You plug the "dead" light into the gun and pull the trigger. A piezo striker sends a high-voltage pulse to the bulb, which often lights again.. Does anyone know what's going on here? http://www.amazon.com/Keeper-01201-C...ature/dp/B000R... Their web site explains how it works: http://www.lightkeeperpro.com/How-It-Works/how-the-lightkeeper-pro-works Also, Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LightKeeper_Pro -- Jeff Liebermann * * 150 Felker St #D * *http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Santa Cruz CA 95060http://802.11junk.com Skype: JeffLiebermann * * AE6KS * *831-336-2558 I think that going forward, (from this point anyway) the answer is that the filaments on these crappy bulbs are probably over rated, and therefore full line voltage should probably not be applied to the string. I'm going to buy a bunch of identical new Christmas light strings of the same type, (on discount, after Christmas of course). This way they will be cheap enough so that l can buy enough to be able to cut and past extra lamps onto each string. This will essentially be equivalent to running each string at something like 105 to 110 volts, and this should increase the life span of the lamps substantially. In addition I am also going to speculate that since the lamps will then be running cooler it may keep the shunts from burning through the posts and rendering lamps with otherwise good filaments bad as well. This tactic may not stimulate the economy but it should keep the Christmas light money in my pocket rather than theirs. Merry Christmas! Lenny |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 07:27 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2014 DIYbanter