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-   -   How much flourescent ballast humming is too much indicating replacement? (https://www.diybanter.com/home-repair/582636-how-much-flourescent-ballast-humming-too-much-indicating-replacement.html)

Hazuki Nakamura December 8th 16 07:28 PM

How much flourescent ballast humming is too much indicating replacement?
 
How much flourescent ballast humming is too much indicating replacement?

I have some ballasts that don't hum at all, and some that hum loud enough
to hear them ten feet away and some that barely hum, but they do hum.

For the ones that hum noticeably (about the sound of a refrigerator
compressor), I know that they need to be replaced and I know that replacing
the $20 ballast is probably substandard to going all LED so for the loud
hummers I will go to the expense of replacing the entire fixtures with
LEDs.

But LEDs will drop in price by a lot over the next few years so I don't
want to replace any ballast or fixture that doesn't need to be replaced
right now.

So my question is all about the ones that hum ever so little?

The hum is about the level of a soft whisper. You have to stop to look to
notice, otherwise you wouldn't notice the minor subtle hum.

Is that soft-whisper ballast telling me to replace it also?

DerbyDad03 December 8th 16 08:44 PM

How much flourescent ballast humming is too much indicating replacement?
 
On Thursday, December 8, 2016 at 2:28:18 PM UTC-5, Hazuki Nakamura wrote:
How much flourescent ballast humming is too much indicating replacement?

I have some ballasts that don't hum at all, and some that hum loud enough
to hear them ten feet away and some that barely hum, but they do hum.

For the ones that hum noticeably (about the sound of a refrigerator
compressor), I know that they need to be replaced and I know that replacing
the $20 ballast is probably substandard to going all LED so for the loud
hummers I will go to the expense of replacing the entire fixtures with
LEDs.

But LEDs will drop in price by a lot over the next few years so I don't
want to replace any ballast or fixture that doesn't need to be replaced
right now.

So my question is all about the ones that hum ever so little?

The hum is about the level of a soft whisper. You have to stop to look to
notice, otherwise you wouldn't notice the minor subtle hum.

Is that soft-whisper ballast telling me to replace it also?


If the light is fine and the noise is so minimal that it doesn't bother you,
why would you replace it at this time?

Is the fixture so vital that if it failed hard you couldn't wait a few
days to repair it? If so, replace it as soon as it makes any more noise
than a new one or wait until the noise is bothersome.

Instead of buying a $20 ballast, why not use direct wire LED's? Two 4' T8
LED tubes cost the same as a ballast. With a little rewiring, you avoid
"the expense of replacing the entire fixtures with LEDs." and eliminate
ballast issues forever.

https://www.earthled.com/collections...nt=13929188100

Ralph Mowery December 8th 16 08:58 PM

How much flourescent ballast humming is too much indicating replacement?
 
In article ,
says...

How much flourescent ballast humming is too much indicating replacement?

I have some ballasts that don't hum at all, and some that hum loud enough
to hear them ten feet away and some that barely hum, but they do hum.

For the ones that hum noticeably (about the sound of a refrigerator
compressor), I know that they need to be replaced and I know that replacing
the $20 ballast is probably substandard to going all LED so for the loud
hummers I will go to the expense of replacing the entire fixtures with
LEDs.

But LEDs will drop in price by a lot over the next few years so I don't
want to replace any ballast or fixture that doesn't need to be replaced
right now.

So my question is all about the ones that hum ever so little?

The hum is about the level of a soft whisper. You have to stop to look to
notice, otherwise you wouldn't notice the minor subtle hum.

Is that soft-whisper ballast telling me to replace it also?


Don't worry about the noise unless it bothers you. Ballast have a noise
rating and some may make more noise than others. When they start
makiing noise then may go for a long time before going electrically bad.


Frank[_24_] December 9th 16 12:01 AM

How much flourescent ballast humming is too much indicatingreplacement?
 
On 12/8/2016 3:58 PM, Ralph Mowery wrote:
In article ,
says...

How much flourescent ballast humming is too much indicating replacement?

I have some ballasts that don't hum at all, and some that hum loud enough
to hear them ten feet away and some that barely hum, but they do hum.

For the ones that hum noticeably (about the sound of a refrigerator
compressor), I know that they need to be replaced and I know that replacing
the $20 ballast is probably substandard to going all LED so for the loud
hummers I will go to the expense of replacing the entire fixtures with
LEDs.

But LEDs will drop in price by a lot over the next few years so I don't
want to replace any ballast or fixture that doesn't need to be replaced
right now.

So my question is all about the ones that hum ever so little?

The hum is about the level of a soft whisper. You have to stop to look to
notice, otherwise you wouldn't notice the minor subtle hum.

Is that soft-whisper ballast telling me to replace it also?


Don't worry about the noise unless it bothers you. Ballast have a noise
rating and some may make more noise than others. When they start
makiing noise then may go for a long time before going electrically bad.


I've had cfl hummers that hummed from the time they were put in. Ones
in the kitchen annoyed me but not wife and now that they are gone they
were replaced with led's.

Ed Pawlowski December 9th 16 12:46 AM

How much flourescent ballast humming is too much indicatingreplacement?
 
On 12/8/2016 2:28 PM, Hazuki Nakamura wrote:


So my question is all about the ones that hum ever so little?

The hum is about the level of a soft whisper. You have to stop to look to
notice, otherwise you wouldn't notice the minor subtle hum.

Is that soft-whisper ballast telling me to replace it also?


The time to replace it is when the hum bothers you. Could hum for
years. Sure, the cost of LED will go down but you can;t put a dollar
value on peace of mind.

You for pay for that hum if that is a factor. The hum uses (and wastes)
electricity.

Seymore4Head December 9th 16 01:49 AM

How much flourescent ballast humming is too much indicating replacement?
 
On Thu, 08 Dec 2016 20:49:36 -0500, wrote:

On Thu, 8 Dec 2016 19:01:57 -0500, Frank "frank wrote:

On 12/8/2016 3:58 PM, Ralph Mowery wrote:
In article ,

says...

How much flourescent ballast humming is too much indicating replacement?

I have some ballasts that don't hum at all, and some that hum loud enough
to hear them ten feet away and some that barely hum, but they do hum.

For the ones that hum noticeably (about the sound of a refrigerator
compressor), I know that they need to be replaced and I know that replacing
the $20 ballast is probably substandard to going all LED so for the loud
hummers I will go to the expense of replacing the entire fixtures with
LEDs.

But LEDs will drop in price by a lot over the next few years so I don't
want to replace any ballast or fixture that doesn't need to be replaced
right now.

So my question is all about the ones that hum ever so little?


In MANY cases just tightening the ballast or putting a shim between
it and the fixture housing will shut the balast up completely. If it
can't move in relation to the case, it can't make a noise. (unless it
is vibrating enough to actually make the case into a "speaker"

The hum is about the level of a soft whisper. You have to stop to look to
notice, otherwise you wouldn't notice the minor subtle hum.

Is that soft-whisper ballast telling me to replace it also?

Don't worry about the noise unless it bothers you. Ballast have a noise
rating and some may make more noise than others. When they start
makiing noise then may go for a long time before going electrically bad.


I've had cfl hummers that hummed from the time they were put in. Ones
in the kitchen annoyed me but not wife and now that they are gone they
were replaced with led's.

There are quite a few that I hear now with my hearing aids that I
never heard before - - - -


An elderly couple was attending church services, about halfway through
she leans over and says to her husband, "

I just let out a silent fart what do you think I should do?"

He replies " Put a new battery in your hearing aid."

[email protected] December 9th 16 01:49 AM

How much flourescent ballast humming is too much indicating replacement?
 
On Thu, 8 Dec 2016 19:01:57 -0500, Frank "frank wrote:

On 12/8/2016 3:58 PM, Ralph Mowery wrote:
In article ,
says...

How much flourescent ballast humming is too much indicating replacement?

I have some ballasts that don't hum at all, and some that hum loud enough
to hear them ten feet away and some that barely hum, but they do hum.

For the ones that hum noticeably (about the sound of a refrigerator
compressor), I know that they need to be replaced and I know that replacing
the $20 ballast is probably substandard to going all LED so for the loud
hummers I will go to the expense of replacing the entire fixtures with
LEDs.

But LEDs will drop in price by a lot over the next few years so I don't
want to replace any ballast or fixture that doesn't need to be replaced
right now.

So my question is all about the ones that hum ever so little?


In MANY cases just tightening the ballast or putting a shim between
it and the fixture housing will shut the balast up completely. If it
can't move in relation to the case, it can't make a noise. (unless it
is vibrating enough to actually make the case into a "speaker"

The hum is about the level of a soft whisper. You have to stop to look to
notice, otherwise you wouldn't notice the minor subtle hum.

Is that soft-whisper ballast telling me to replace it also?


Don't worry about the noise unless it bothers you. Ballast have a noise
rating and some may make more noise than others. When they start
makiing noise then may go for a long time before going electrically bad.


I've had cfl hummers that hummed from the time they were put in. Ones
in the kitchen annoyed me but not wife and now that they are gone they
were replaced with led's.

There are quite a few that I hear now with my hearing aids that I
never heard before - - - -

[email protected] December 9th 16 03:26 AM

How much flourescent ballast humming is too much indicating replacement?
 
A tap of a hammer on the case is worth a try. Not beat on it, but a firm tap, enough to make a visible dent in the metal.

Stormin' Norman December 9th 16 03:18 PM

How much flourescent ballast humming is too much indicating replacement?
 
On Thu, 8 Dec 2016 12:44:48 -0800 (PST), DerbyDad03
wrote:

Instead of buying a $20 ballast, why not use direct wire LED's? Two 4' T8


I want to thank you for mentioning these as I didn't know they were
available. I just ordered 40 tubes through Amazon for my Workshop /
Barn / Stable.

This is what I purchased:

http://amzn.to/2h5hwDj

DerbyDad03 December 9th 16 04:21 PM

How much flourescent ballast humming is too much indicating replacement?
 
On Friday, December 9, 2016 at 10:18:07 AM UTC-5, Stormin' Norman wrote:
On Thu, 8 Dec 2016 12:44:48 -0800 (PST), DerbyDad03
wrote:

Instead of buying a $20 ballast, why not use direct wire LED's? Two 4' T8


I want to thank you for mentioning these as I didn't know they were
available. I just ordered 40 tubes through Amazon for my Workshop /
Barn / Stable.

This is what I purchased:

http://amzn.to/2h5hwDj


You are aware that you now have to rewire 20 fixtures to bypass the
ballasts, right?

You also have to make sure that you don't have shunted tombstones. If you
do, you may need to swap them out for non-shunted varieties. The tubes I
bought from EarthLed will not work with shunted tombstones.

See he

https://www.earthled.com/blogs/led-l...nted-tombstone

Just as an aside, would I have ordered 40 bulbs in one shot without testing
a couple to see if I like the light? Nope. I ordered 2 from EarthLed to test
in one fixture.

A few months ago I purchased a 4' LED shop light fixture for my garage and
it is a lot brighter than the standard florescent it replaced. Almost too
bright. I don't know if I would want my entire shop lit with the same
fixtures, thus my desire to test a couple of the LED tubes in my shop first.
I'll do the fixture over a workbench where more light would be a good idea,
but I may not do the main floor space, at least not all of it.



Stormin' Norman December 9th 16 05:52 PM

How much flourescent ballast humming is too much indicating replacement?
 
On Fri, 9 Dec 2016 08:21:52 -0800 (PST), DerbyDad03
wrote:

On Friday, December 9, 2016 at 10:18:07 AM UTC-5, Stormin' Norman wrote:
On Thu, 8 Dec 2016 12:44:48 -0800 (PST), DerbyDad03
wrote:

Instead of buying a $20 ballast, why not use direct wire LED's? Two 4' T8


I want to thank you for mentioning these as I didn't know they were
available. I just ordered 40 tubes through Amazon for my Workshop /
Barn / Stable.

This is what I purchased:

http://amzn.to/2h5hwDj


You are aware that you now have to rewire 20 fixtures to bypass the
ballasts, right?

You also have to make sure that you don't have shunted tombstones. If you
do, you may need to swap them out for non-shunted varieties. The tubes I
bought from EarthLed will not work with shunted tombstones.

See he

https://www.earthled.com/blogs/led-l...nted-tombstone

Just as an aside, would I have ordered 40 bulbs in one shot without testing
a couple to see if I like the light? Nope. I ordered 2 from EarthLed to test
in one fixture.

A few months ago I purchased a 4' LED shop light fixture for my garage and
it is a lot brighter than the standard florescent it replaced. Almost too
bright. I don't know if I would want my entire shop lit with the same
fixtures, thus my desire to test a couple of the LED tubes in my shop first.
I'll do the fixture over a workbench where more light would be a good idea,
but I may not do the main floor space, at least not all of it.


Stormin' Norman December 9th 16 06:06 PM

How much flourescent ballast humming is too much indicating replacement?
 
On Fri, 9 Dec 2016 08:21:52 -0800 (PST), DerbyDad03
wrote:

On Friday, December 9, 2016 at 10:18:07 AM UTC-5, Stormin' Norman wrote:
On Thu, 8 Dec 2016 12:44:48 -0800 (PST), DerbyDad03
wrote:

Instead of buying a $20 ballast, why not use direct wire LED's? Two 4' T8


I want to thank you for mentioning these as I didn't know they were
available. I just ordered 40 tubes through Amazon for my Workshop /
Barn / Stable.

This is what I purchased:

http://amzn.to/2h5hwDj


You are aware that you now have to rewire 20 fixtures to bypass the
ballasts, right?


10 fixtures, they are four tubes each. The ballasts are old and I
want them out anyway. I have a lift and a great grandson who loves
electrical and electronic work. The fixtures are suspended from
chains and hooks so, we will take them down and do them on the bench.


You also have to make sure that you don't have shunted tombstones. If you
do, you may need to swap them out for non-shunted varieties. The tubes I
bought from EarthLed will not work with shunted tombstones.


The tubes work with either style tombstone, I checked that as part of
my pre-purchase evaluation. Doesn't really matter as I have several
boxes of replacements of both styles.


See he

https://www.earthled.com/blogs/led-l...nted-tombstone

Just as an aside, would I have ordered 40 bulbs in one shot without testing
a couple to see if I like the light? Nope. I ordered 2 from EarthLed to test
in one fixture.


Call me wild and crazy. I know what 6000k light looks like and if I
they are not as represented, I can send them back for free with
Amazon. Easy peasy. At my age, it is less than wise to wait for
anything.


A few months ago I purchased a 4' LED shop light fixture for my garage and
it is a lot brighter than the standard florescent it replaced. Almost too
bright. I don't know if I would want my entire shop lit with the same
fixtures, thus my desire to test a couple of the LED tubes in my shop first.
I'll do the fixture over a workbench where more light would be a good idea,
but I may not do the main floor space, at least not all of it.


I have the fixtures wired with a dual switch, I can energize either 2
tubes or 4 tubes in all of the fixtures depending upon what I want to
do. I almost always find I don't have enough light.

DerbyDad03 December 9th 16 08:44 PM

How much flourescent ballast humming is too much indicating replacement?
 
On Friday, December 9, 2016 at 1:06:44 PM UTC-5, Stormin' Norman wrote:
On Fri, 9 Dec 2016 08:21:52 -0800 (PST), DerbyDad03
wrote:

On Friday, December 9, 2016 at 10:18:07 AM UTC-5, Stormin' Norman wrote:
On Thu, 8 Dec 2016 12:44:48 -0800 (PST), DerbyDad03
wrote:

Instead of buying a $20 ballast, why not use direct wire LED's? Two 4' T8

I want to thank you for mentioning these as I didn't know they were
available. I just ordered 40 tubes through Amazon for my Workshop /
Barn / Stable.

This is what I purchased:

http://amzn.to/2h5hwDj


You are aware that you now have to rewire 20 fixtures to bypass the
ballasts, right?


10 fixtures, they are four tubes each. The ballasts are old and I
want them out anyway. I have a lift and a great grandson who loves
electrical and electronic work. The fixtures are suspended from
chains and hooks so, we will take them down and do them on the bench.


You also have to make sure that you don't have shunted tombstones. If you
do, you may need to swap them out for non-shunted varieties. The tubes I
bought from EarthLed will not work with shunted tombstones.


The tubes work with either style tombstone, I checked that as part of
my pre-purchase evaluation. Doesn't really matter as I have several
boxes of replacements of both styles.


That's probably because they are Dual-End Powered. The ones I ordered are
single end powered so shunted tombstones won't work.


See he

https://www.earthled.com/blogs/led-l...nted-tombstone

Just as an aside, would I have ordered 40 bulbs in one shot without testing
a couple to see if I like the light? Nope. I ordered 2 from EarthLed to test
in one fixture.


Call me wild and crazy. I know what 6000k light looks like and if I
they are not as represented, I can send them back for free with
Amazon. Easy peasy. At my age, it is less than wise to wait for
anything.


Your response is in the middle of my comments, but I did use the words
"like the *light*" so I can understand why you answered the way you did.

My next paragraph (below) details the issue I was really talking about
when I said "like the light". It was related to lumens, not CCT.

(more on that below)



A few months ago I purchased a 4' LED shop light fixture for my garage and
it is a lot brighter than the standard florescent it replaced. Almost too
bright. I don't know if I would want my entire shop lit with the same
fixtures, thus my desire to test a couple of the LED tubes in my shop first.
I'll do the fixture over a workbench where more light would be a good idea,
but I may not do the main floor space, at least not all of it.


I have the fixtures wired with a dual switch, I can energize either 2
tubes or 4 tubes in all of the fixtures depending upon what I want to
do. I almost always find I don't have enough light.


I don't know what you are replacing, and I'm still learning about LED
replacements, but this is my understanding:

It looks like the bulbs you ordered are 2400 lumens. A 32w 4'ft fluorescent
is about 2850. However, because of the directionality (all down) of the
light from an LED tube, a lower lumen LED may appear to be much brighter
than a higher lumen fluorescent. EarthLED customer service verified that
for me when I spoke to them about the 1800 lumen tubes I ordered. My guess
is that a 2400 lumen bulb would be too bright for where I want to use them. The 1800's haven't arrived yet so I'm not speaking from experience - yet.
We'll see, but that is why I want to test them I buy more. I have areas that
have different lighting needs, so they'll get put to use anyway.

As I age, I also understand the importance of task lighting more and more. ;-) I have clip-on lights above the miter saw, band saw, drill press, etc.

Stormin' Norman December 9th 16 10:00 PM

How much flourescent ballast humming is too much indicating replacement?
 
On Fri, 9 Dec 2016 12:44:48 -0800 (PST), DerbyDad03
wrote:


Call me wild and crazy. I know what 6000k light looks like and if I
they are not as represented, I can send them back for free with
Amazon. Easy peasy. At my age, it is less than wise to wait for
anything.


Your response is in the middle of my comments, but I did use the words
"like the *light*" so I can understand why you answered the way you did.

My next paragraph (below) details the issue I was really talking about
when I said "like the light". It was related to lumens, not CCT.

(more on that below)



A few months ago I purchased a 4' LED shop light fixture for my garage and
it is a lot brighter than the standard florescent it replaced. Almost too
bright. I don't know if I would want my entire shop lit with the same
fixtures, thus my desire to test a couple of the LED tubes in my shop first.
I'll do the fixture over a workbench where more light would be a good idea,
but I may not do the main floor space, at least not all of it.


I have the fixtures wired with a dual switch, I can energize either 2
tubes or 4 tubes in all of the fixtures depending upon what I want to
do. I almost always find I don't have enough light.


I don't know what you are replacing, and I'm still learning about LED
replacements, but this is my understanding:

It looks like the bulbs you ordered are 2400 lumens. A 32w 4'ft fluorescent
is about 2850. However, because of the directionality (all down) of the
light from an LED tube, a lower lumen LED may appear to be much brighter
than a higher lumen fluorescent. EarthLED customer service verified that
for me when I spoke to them about the 1800 lumen tubes I ordered. My guess
is that a 2400 lumen bulb would be too bright for where I want to use them. The 1800's haven't arrived yet so I'm not speaking from experience - yet.
We'll see, but that is why I want to test them I buy more. I have areas that
have different lighting needs, so they'll get put to use anyway.


Actually, the lights I ordered are rated 2500Lm @ 6000 Kelvin. The
temperature of the new light is higher than the old lights so these
should allow for good medical care for the horses as well as a nice
bright light for working on projects.

I will let you know how well I like them. I thought the price was
good and there is that great Amazon return policy.

Anyway, I just wanted to thank you for making me aware these existed
at all, I did not know about them.


As I age, I also understand the importance of task lighting more and more. ;-) I have clip-on lights above the miter saw, band saw, drill press, etc.



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