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Default What is inside an LED "starter"

On 04/03/2019 00:43, Roger Hayter wrote:
I don't know when the last public DC mains supply was replaced, but I
tend to think that AC/DC TVs were actually designed to work on DC mains
up to the early 1950s at least.


There were DC mains supplies to the late 1970's in areas like London's
West End which were used by the theatres for arc lamps. Apparently also
used for many lift and escalator motors. University College London used
it too, and not just in their (at the time) Bloomsbury Theatre. We had
220VDC mains sockets in the physics labs, which I used for a carbon arc
lamp at one point. (The sockets were like 15A round pin sockets, but the
earth pin was nearer to the live pins.) By 1983 (and probably a year or
two before), the DC mains supply had ceased and it was generated locally
on site instead.

Of course, DC supply was something specialised at this point, and not
provided to standard consumers - only those with a specific requirement.

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Andrew

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Default What is inside an LED "starter"

On Thu, 07 Mar 2019 09:32:01 +0000, Andrew Gabriel wrote:

On 04/03/2019 00:43, Roger Hayter wrote:
I don't know when the last public DC mains supply was replaced, but I
tend to think that AC/DC TVs were actually designed to work on DC mains
up to the early 1950s at least.


There were DC mains supplies to the late 1970's in areas like London's
West End which were used by the theatres for arc lamps. Apparently also
used for many lift and escalator motors. University College London used
it too, and not just in their (at the time) Bloomsbury Theatre. We had
220VDC mains sockets in the physics labs, which I used for a carbon arc
lamp at one point. (The sockets were like 15A round pin sockets, but the
earth pin was nearer to the live pins.) By 1983 (and probably a year or
two before), the DC mains supply had ceased and it was generated locally
on site instead.

Of course, DC supply was something specialised at this point, and not
provided to standard consumers - only those with a specific requirement.


We had DC at home in the late 1950s/early 1960s in our part of Brighton.
The town wasn't completely changed over until 1965.

I remember my Tri-Ang train set suddenly acquired two small red boxes -
transformers! Before that I had a rotary converter to get 12 volts.

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On 07/03/2019 10:24, Bob Eager wrote:

We had DC at home in the late 1950s/early 1960s in our part of Brighton.
The town wasn't completely changed over until 1965.


There's still a lot of AC/DC people in Brighton.

Bill
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On 07/03/2019 10:40, Bill Wright wrote:
On 07/03/2019 10:24, Bob Eager wrote:

We had DC at home in the late 1950s/early 1960s in our part of Brighton.
The town wasn't completely changed over until 1965.


There's still a lot of AC/DC people in Brighton.

Bill

ROTFL
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On Thu, 07 Mar 2019 10:40:13 +0000, Bill Wright wrote:

On 07/03/2019 10:24, Bob Eager wrote:

We had DC at home in the late 1950s/early 1960s in our part of
Brighton.
The town wasn't completely changed over until 1965.


There's still a lot of AC/DC people in Brighton.


'still' (if you accept that) is probably wrong. That only happened in
recent years. And it's much more that *parts* of Brighton are heavily
LGBTQ. Other parts are very little LGBTQ, probably below the average.

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wish to copy them they can pay me £1 a message.
Use the BIG mirror service in the UK: http://www.mirrorservice.org
*lightning surge protection* - a w_tom conductor


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On 7 Mar 2019 12:01:25 GMT, Bob Eager wrote:

On Thu, 07 Mar 2019 10:40:13 +0000, Bill Wright wrote:

On 07/03/2019 10:24, Bob Eager wrote:

We had DC at home in the late 1950s/early 1960s in our part of
Brighton.
The town wasn't completely changed over until 1965.


There's still a lot of AC/DC people in Brighton.


'still' (if you accept that) is probably wrong. That only happened in
recent years. And it's much more that *parts* of Brighton are heavily
LGBTQ. Other parts are very little LGBTQ, probably below the average.


I'm getting a bit lost with all these sandwiches nowadays. Just got BLT,
then along comes another one.
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The gods will stay away
whilst religions hold sway
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On Thu, 07 Mar 2019 10:40:13 +0000, Bill Wright wrote:

On 07/03/2019 10:24, Bob Eager wrote:

We had DC at home in the late 1950s/early 1960s in our part of
Brighton.
The town wasn't completely changed over until 1965.


There's still a lot of AC/DC people in Brighton.


That reminds me of the advice I was offered some forty years ago not to
bend down to pick up a 50 pence piece off the pavement if you were in New
Brighton but to kick it along the pavement until you were outside of the
town.

--
Johnny B Good
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Default What is inside an LED "starter"

Andrew Gabriel posted for all of us...



On 04/03/2019 00:43, Roger Hayter wrote:
I don't know when the last public DC mains supply was replaced, but I
tend to think that AC/DC TVs were actually designed to work on DC mains
up to the early 1950s at least.


There were DC mains supplies to the late 1970's in areas like London's
West End which were used by the theatres for arc lamps. Apparently also
used for many lift and escalator motors. University College London used
it too, and not just in their (at the time) Bloomsbury Theatre. We had
220VDC mains sockets in the physics labs, which I used for a carbon arc
lamp at one point. (The sockets were like 15A round pin sockets, but the
earth pin was nearer to the live pins.) By 1983 (and probably a year or
two before), the DC mains supply had ceased and it was generated locally
on site instead.

Of course, DC supply was something specialised at this point, and not
provided to standard consumers - only those with a specific requirement.


We do not care.

--
Tekkie
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