HIDLad001
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Alex
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Should I use another incandescent lamp in series to limit the current? If so, what wattage? The lamp I want to run is 360w.
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sol
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I believe these are meant to be overdriven on 120V mains. The idea is to increase brightness and colour temperature at the expense of life. They are also meant to be actively cooled, usually with a small fan.
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HIDLad001
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Alex
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I have a fan from an old microwave oven that I could use, and yes these (even with the fan) do get very hot. But this overdriving also makes them incredibly efficient, because as you increase the voltage to an incandescent lamp, it gets more efficient (but at the cost of service life).
But somebody also told me that they had an overhead projector that ran the 82V lamp off of a tap on the fan motor winding, and I have seen overhead projectors with 82V transformers, so maybe they are sometimes ran on 82V to increase the service life.
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Robotjulep
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Don't run 82v halogen lamp on 120v. It will burn out in seconds within testing. I had ruined my MR-16 Osram 360w 82v lamp doing that. If you took apart an old overhead projector, they contain a fan and a diode. The diode is wired in series with the lamp and steps down the voltage to 82v. They can also be used to run incandescent lamps at 82v. I have 1 Apollo 410w 82v lamp and a Sylvania 250w 82v lamp though. I don't think I have a use for them as I don't have a proper enclosure to operate them safely. Now that you brought up halogen projector lamps, I have quite a few in my collection and will get to posting them!
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HIDLad001
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I understand that the diode would reduce the voltage because it is only rectifying half of the side wave while the other half is not present, therefore reducing the RMS voltage. I do probably have some suitably rated high-power diodes, so I will try that with a normal incandescent lamp when I get the chance.
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joseph_125
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An easy way on 120v is to get a second lamp with identical specs (voltage, wattage) and connect them together in series.
Another way is to find a variac with enough output capacity and then set the variac to 82v and run it off the variac.
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sol
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Well, I learned something today !
I regularly use an overhead projector with a 360W, 82V lamp (ENX, I think). I have never taken it apart, however, and I had no clue there was some kind of step down transformer or lower voltage tap in the fan motor. I do know that the fan still runs when the lamp goes EOL, though.
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HIDLad001
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Alex
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Yep ENX spec sounds right for 360w. The lamp would be running off of the fan motor much like how you can get different voltages off of the taps of an autotransformer HID ballast. I also wonder how much these lamps flicker when run half-wave off of a diode, although since it is a filament lamp being run on 60Hz, probably not a lot.
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Rommie
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Try to get a Variac, they are invaluable for things like this. Here in 240V land, I can run a lamp at any voltage from 3V or so up to 280V.
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Robotjulep
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Yep ENX spec sounds right for 360w. The lamp would be running off of the fan motor much like how you can get different voltages off of the taps of an autotransformer HID ballast. I also wonder how much these lamps flicker when run half-wave off of a diode, although since it is a filament lamp being run on 60Hz, probably not a lot.
I haven't seen my incandescent or halogen lamps flicker when using the diode. But why are some overhead projector bulbs 360w 82v and others 600w 120v? Is it so the halogen capsule is so small that it can fit in an mr-16 reflector when a 120v lamp will be too big?
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AngryHorse
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Rich, Coaster junkie!
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Tungsten lamps were quite hardy things, I remember running a bank of 24 x 25 watt common candle GLS on my Petter AVA back in my rally days, sometimes the generator would sneak up to 300 volts during the day, for hours on end, and not one of the little candle lamps burned out! Although I did fry Jo’s phone charger on it once at Llandudno Transport Festival at 300 volts! , she wasn’t suitably impressed!
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HIDLad001
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Alex
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Try to get a Variac, they are invaluable for things like this. Here in 240V land, I can run a lamp at any voltage from 3V or so up to 280V.
I would love a variac but I can't find a good one that's UL listed, and it would be kind of impractical for a semi-permanent installation.
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« Last Edit: October 09, 2023, 11:52:36 AM by HIDLad001 »
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joseph_125
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If you're handy with wiring and building enclosures, you can sometimes find used loose vintage UL listed panel mount variacs from brands such as Superior Electric (Powerstat) or General Radio (Variac) that work just fine but aren't wired up or fitted to an enclosure for a bit cheaper than a prewired benchtop model.
For a more permanent solution, I believe you can get buck transformers that output 85v from a 120v supply.
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HIDLad001
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Alex
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Thanks for the idea! Do you know where I can get the 85V buck transformers as well?
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joseph_125
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I'm guessing you'll probably find some on eBay. Another option is this wired for 85v but it's not exactly cheap.
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