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UK diy (uk.d-i-y) For the discussion of all topics related to diy (do-it-yourself) in the UK. All levels of experience and proficency are welcome to join in to ask questions or offer solutions. |
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#1
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I would like to connect a halogen up lighter with a dimmer control to a
lighting circuit. However, the up lighter has a 500W bulb (yes I know this is expensive to run!) and I am concerned about the load on the lighting circuit. The rating info on the dimmer switch has two sets of figures with one set, I assume, referring to the min and max wattage of the bulb stated as 60-500W. The other set refers to 60-300W which I assume refers to the rating of the dimmer control itself. If this is right this would explain why the light came with a 5A fused plug, because if the load of the whole light fitting was based just on the bulb rating then the max load would be 2.1A (500/240) and surely a 3A fuse would have been sufficient. However, if the dimmer switch is rated at 300W then the max load of the light would increase to 800W (3.3A). The lighting circuit currently has a max load of 400W (1.6A) and therefore installing the light still leave a total max load of under 5A. As this is protected by a 6A circuit breaker would this be OK. If this is OK is there any problem with the light not having the protection of its own separate 5A fuse as I would cut off the plug and wire is directly into the circuit. The switch for the light would be a standard wall switch and am I also correct in thinking that these switches are rated at 5A. Any comment gratefully received. |
#2
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geoffr wrote:
I would like to connect a halogen up lighter with a dimmer control to a lighting circuit. However, the up lighter has a 500W bulb (yes I know this is expensive to run!) and I am concerned about the load on the lighting circuit. The rating info on the dimmer switch has two sets of figures with one set, I assume, referring to the min and max wattage of the bulb stated as 60-500W. The other set refers to 60-300W which I assume refers to the rating of the dimmer control itself. If this is right this would explain why the light came with a 5A fused plug, because if the load of the whole light fitting was based just on the bulb rating then the max load would be 2.1A (500/240) and surely a 3A fuse would have been sufficient. However, if the dimmer switch is rated at 300W then the max load of the light would increase to 800W (3.3A). The lighting circuit currently has a max load of 400W (1.6A) and therefore installing the light still leave a total max load of under 5A. As this is protected by a 6A circuit breaker would this be OK. If this is OK is there any problem with the light not having the protection of its own separate 5A fuse as I would cut off the plug and wire is directly into the circuit. The switch for the light would be a standard wall switch and am I also correct in thinking that these switches are rated at 5A. Any comment gratefully received. 500w of halogen will be way too bright for any normal residence. Probably about right if you live in a castle. Dimming it will reduce light output but not reduce power consumptoin much, and is simply not a smart move. Power consumptoin will be truly excessive. Halogen uplighters are a fire risk, the bulbs run way hotter than any other type of domestic lightbulb, and theyre pointing upwards... not a good idea. In short I'd drop the idea and think again. What size room are you trying to light? What ceiling height, single or double storey height? Why a freestanding uplighter, and why halogen? NT |
#3
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#4
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On Thu, 31 Aug 2006 19:22:11 +0100 someone who may be Frank Erskine
wrote this:- 500w of halogen will be way too bright for any normal residence. I have 300W of halogen lighting in my tiny bathroom alone. Plus 60W or so of normal incandescent. That might well us a number of things. However, it does not tell us how sensible such a scheme is compared to a bathroom with a 21W energy saving bulb. -- David Hansen, Edinburgh I will *always* explain revoked encryption keys, unless RIP prevents me http://www.opsi.gov.uk/acts/acts2000/00023--e.htm#54 |
#5
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On 2006-08-31 19:54:46 +0100, David Hansen
said: On Thu, 31 Aug 2006 19:22:11 +0100 someone who may be Frank Erskine wrote this:- 500w of halogen will be way too bright for any normal residence. I have 300W of halogen lighting in my tiny bathroom alone. Plus 60W or so of normal incandescent. That might well us a number of things. However, it does not tell us how sensible such a scheme is compared to a bathroom with a 21W energy saving bulb. Very sensible. He has it because he likes it. It's called choice. |
#6
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Frank Erskine wrote:
On 31 Aug 2006 08:57:39 -0700, wrote: 500w of halogen will be way too bright for any normal residence. I have 300W of halogen lighting in my tiny bathroom alone. Plus 60W or so of normal incandescent. That's not lighting. That's heating. Edgar |
#7
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Edgar Iredale wrote:
I have 300W of halogen lighting in my tiny bathroom alone. Plus 60W or so of normal incandescent. That's not lighting. That's heating. Which in a bathroom is perhaps quite a good idea! -- Cheers, John. /================================================== ===============\ | Internode Ltd - http://www.internode.co.uk | |-----------------------------------------------------------------| | John Rumm - john(at)internode(dot)co(dot)uk | \================================================= ================/ |
#8
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Frank Erskine wrote:
On 31 Aug 2006 08:57:39 -0700, wrote: 500w of halogen will be way too bright for any normal residence. I have 300W of halogen lighting in my tiny bathroom alone. Plus 60W or so of normal incandescent. I do occasionally see lighting like this, and find it a truly unpleasant experience. NT |
#9
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#10
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In article . com,
"geoffr" writes: Andrew Gabriel wrote: 500W halogen is probably a K9 lamp. These are available in 300W and (harder to find) 200W. They are also available in energy saving versions at 375W and 225W, with same light output as 500W and 300W respectively (internal infra-red reflective coating reflects the infra-red back onto the filament). So pick one of the lower powered versions so you don't need to use a dimmer. I'm interested in these energy saving versions. I assume they are available from B&Q etc? They are not easy to find. B&Q do have them in stock occasionally, but I don't recall seeing them in other retail outlets. They were a General Electric invention, but you may find other manufacturers making them too now. -- Andrew Gabriel |
#11
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geoffr wrote:
I would like to connect a halogen up lighter with a dimmer control to a lighting circuit. However, the up lighter has a 500W bulb (yes I know Its being used as its simply what I have available, It doesnt much matter what you have available, as the electricity consumption will be many times the purchase cost of any reasonable fitting. If youre determined to use halogen, at least omit the dimmer and get the right power bulb for the job. NT |
#12
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In article . com,
"geoffr" writes: I would like to connect a halogen up lighter with a dimmer control to a lighting circuit. However, the up lighter has a 500W bulb (yes I know this is expensive to run!) and I am concerned about the load on the lighting circuit. 500W halogen is probably a K9 lamp. These are available in 300W and (harder to find) 200W. They are also available in energy saving versions at 375W and 225W, with same light output as 500W and 300W respectively (internal infra-red reflective coating reflects the infra-red back onto the filament). So pick one of the lower powered versions so you don't need to use a dimmer. The rating info on the dimmer switch has two sets of figures with one set, I assume, referring to the min and max wattage of the bulb stated as 60-500W. The other set refers to 60-300W which I assume refers to the rating of the dimmer control itself. This is wrong, but I don't know what the second set is for. It might the the max rating of halogen lamp. If this is right this would explain why the light came with a 5A fused plug, because if the load of the whole light fitting was based just on the bulb rating then the max load would be 2.1A (500/240) and surely a 3A fuse would have been sufficient. Filament lamps have a significant switch-on surge. For these high power halogen lamps, the initial current is 17 times the running current, e.g. 35A for your 500W halogen. A 5A fuse will generally withstand this for long enough for the halogen lamp to warm up, but a lower current fuse may not. However, if the dimmer switch is rated at 300W then the max load of the light would increase to 800W (3.3A). This makes no sense. The lighting circuit currently has a max load of 400W (1.6A) and therefore installing the light still leave a total max load of under 5A. As this is protected by a 6A circuit breaker would this be OK. Others already explained how you need to work out the loading. If this is OK is there any problem with the light not having the protection of its own separate 5A fuse as I would cut off the plug and wire is directly into the circuit. If it's a portable lamp, it really needs a plug and socket. You could fit a 5A BS546 round pin socket to the lighting circuit. The loss of fuse doesn't matter in this case. The switch for the light would be a standard wall switch and am I also correct in thinking that these switches are rated at 5A. Yes, if not more, but it will be written on the back. -- Andrew Gabriel |
#13
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Andrew Gabriel wrote:
The rating info on the dimmer switch has two sets of figures with one set, I assume, referring to the min and max wattage of the bulb stated as 60-500W. The other set refers to 60-300W which I assume refers to the rating of the dimmer control itself. This is wrong, but I don't know what the second set is for. It might the the max rating of halogen lamp. The second set may be the derated capacity when used with an inductive load (i.e. a halogen!) -- Cheers, John. /================================================== ===============\ | Internode Ltd - http://www.internode.co.uk | |-----------------------------------------------------------------| | John Rumm - john(at)internode(dot)co(dot)uk | \================================================= ================/ |
#14
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John Rumm wrote:
Andrew Gabriel wrote: The rating info on the dimmer switch has two sets of figures with one set, I assume, referring to the min and max wattage of the bulb stated as 60-500W. The other set refers to 60-300W which I assume refers to the rating of the dimmer control itself. This is wrong, but I don't know what the second set is for. It might the the max rating of halogen lamp. The second set may be the derated capacity when used with an inductive load (i.e. a halogen!) Since when has a halogen lamp been an inductive load? Even if you mean a transormer driven low voltage halogen it won't be very inductive - nothing like a motor or solenoid. -- Chris Green |
#15
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![]() John Rumm wrote: Andrew Gabriel wrote: The rating info on the dimmer switch has two sets of figures with one set, I assume, referring to the min and max wattage of the bulb stated as 60-500W. The other set refers to 60-300W which I assume refers to the rating of the dimmer control itself. This is wrong, but I don't know what the second set is for. It might the the max rating of halogen lamp. The second set may be the derated capacity when used with an inductive load (i.e. a halogen!) -- Cheers, John. If its any help the first set of information is stated as follows: (S) (D) Only (N) (FI) 60-300W 50-60HZ The 2nd set of figures definitely refers to the bulb rating as there is a light bulb sign next to the figures of 60-500W. I didnt see this on initial inspection is not easy to read as its raised black lettering on a black background. The light was advertised as 500W and and came with this wattage bulb. |
#16
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In article . com,
geoffr writes The rating info on the dimmer switch has two sets of figures with one set, I assume, referring to the min and max wattage of the bulb stated as 60-500W. The other set refers to 60-300W which I assume refers to the rating of the dimmer control itself. Could be because those halogen bulbs commonly come in 500W and 300W variants. You just fit whatever bulb suits you. -- (\__/) (='.'=) This is Bunny. Copy and paste Bunny into your (")_(") signature to help him gain world domination. http://www.thisisbunny.com/ |
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