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#1
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fish camp light bulb failure
I would appreciate some help with a 12 volt question.
I set up a 7 light long string of 12 volt, 40 watt bulbs on a strand of 12 guage, outdoor lighting, copper wire. The bulbs and bases were standard Edison screw base types. The lights were connected to a 300 watt DC converter made for outdoor yard lights. In theory, I would like to take the same string (with lower wattage bulbs) on sailing trips. In 4 days, 6 of the seven lights have burned out. One light continues to burn at normal brightness. Any ideas or comments on these failures apprecitated. Thanks Tom |
#2
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fish camp light bulb failure
Overvoltage is my guess....... measure the voltage on any one of the bulbs.
-W "Tom Best" wrote in message om... I would appreciate some help with a 12 volt question. I set up a 7 light long string of 12 volt, 40 watt bulbs on a strand of 12 guage, outdoor lighting, copper wire. The bulbs and bases were standard Edison screw base types. The lights were connected to a 300 watt DC converter made for outdoor yard lights. In theory, I would like to take the same string (with lower wattage bulbs) on sailing trips. In 4 days, 6 of the seven lights have burned out. One light continues to burn at normal brightness. Any ideas or comments on these failures apprecitated. Thanks Tom |
#3
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fish camp light bulb failure
Any ideas or comments on these failures appreciated.
In the time I've spent as an Aviation Electrician, I've seen incandescent bulbs fail for many reasons including: vibration, exposure to temperature extremes, poor quality construction, over voltage, and "hot spots" caused by fingerprints on the globe. If you can eliminate most (or all) of these causes, I'd expect your bulb life to increase. My 2¢ (¯`·._.· £ãrrÿ ·._.·´¯) "Tom Best" wrote in message om... I would appreciate some help with a 12 volt question. I set up a 7 light long string of 12 volt, 40 watt bulbs on a strand of 12 guage, outdoor lighting, copper wire. The bulbs and bases were standard Edison screw base types. The lights were connected to a 300 watt DC converter made for outdoor yard lights. In theory, I would like to take the same string (with lower wattage bulbs) on sailing trips. In 4 days, 6 of the seven lights have burned out. One light continues to burn at normal brightness. Any ideas or comments on these failures apprecitated. Thanks Tom |
#4
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fish camp light bulb failure(info)
TOM make sure that your circuit is a parrallel one, not in series.Also you
cannot reduce the watt of the bulb because you will reduce the resistance of your circuit and let pass to much current on the same bulb (burning action) "Tom Best" a écrit dans le message de om... I would appreciate some help with a 12 volt question. I set up a 7 light long string of 12 volt, 40 watt bulbs on a strand of 12 guage, outdoor lighting, copper wire. The bulbs and bases were standard Edison screw base types. The lights were connected to a 300 watt DC converter made for outdoor yard lights. In theory, I would like to take the same string (with lower wattage bulbs) on sailing trips. In 4 days, 6 of the seven lights have burned out. One light continues to burn at normal brightness. Any ideas or comments on these failures apprecitated. Thanks Tom |
#5
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fish camp light bulb failure(info)
"jean" wrote in message
... TOM make sure that your circuit is a parrallel one, not in series.Also you cannot reduce the watt of the bulb because you will reduce the resistance of your circuit and let pass to much current on the same bulb (burning action) This is incorrect. If you reduce the wattage of the globe, the resistance will INCREASE as it will draw LESS current at the same voltage to get the lower power. ( Power = Voltage*Voltage/Resistance). As the bulbs progressively failed, it is obvious that they must be in parallel as they would all go out if any one failed in a series circuit. regards, Mark |
#6
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fish camp light bulb failure
Check the voltage. My Malibu is 12V AC from what I remember.
"Tom Best" wrote in message om... I would appreciate some help with a 12 volt question. I set up a 7 light long string of 12 volt, 40 watt bulbs on a strand of 12 guage, outdoor lighting, copper wire. The bulbs and bases were standard Edison screw base types. The lights were connected to a 300 watt DC converter made for outdoor yard lights. In theory, I would like to take the same string (with lower wattage bulbs) on sailing trips. In 4 days, 6 of the seven lights have burned out. One light continues to burn at normal brightness. Any ideas or comments on these failures apprecitated. Thanks Tom |
#7
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fish camp light bulb failure
"Tom Best" wrote in message om... I would appreciate some help with a 12 volt question. I would think it would be from excessive vibration if they were originally for fixed service in the yard. Leanne |
#8
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fish camp light bulb failure(info)
jean wrote:
TOM make sure that your circuit is a parrallel one, not in series.Also you cannot reduce the watt of the bulb because you will reduce the resistance of your circuit and let pass to much current on the same bulb (burning action) jean; 1) The original poster stated that he had seven (7) bulbs "in parallel", so that's not an issue. 2) Do not understand your "reduce the watt of the bulb" statement. It appears wrong. If you reduce the wattage LESS current will flow (Volts x current = watts). And the resistance will INCREASE. Basic Ohms Law! Example: 12 volts x 1 amp = 12 watts. Resistance of lamp is Volts/Amp = 12/1 = 12 ohms. Example: 12 volts x 2 amps = 24 watts. Resistance of lamp is .......12/2 = 6 ohms. Thus: Twice the resistance results in half the wattage. |
#9
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fish camp light bulb failure(info)
jean,
I'm confused on what you're saying. 40 watts is the current limit for the bulb, period! Unless of course the voltage is too high thereby forcing more current through. From what I see of these outdoor converters, the voltage output is constant. Manufacturers just don't want you to overdrive them with more wattage of bulbs than the trancformer can put out. -JimL jean wrote: TOM make sure that your circuit is a parrallel one, not in series.Also you cannot reduce the watt of the bulb because you will reduce the resistance of your circuit and let pass to much current on the same bulb (burning action) "Tom Best" a écrit dans le message de om... I would appreciate some help with a 12 volt question. I set up a 7 light long string of 12 volt, 40 watt bulbs on a strand of 12 guage, outdoor lighting, copper wire. The bulbs and bases were standard Edison screw base types. The lights were connected to a 300 watt DC converter made for outdoor yard lights. In theory, I would like to take the same string (with lower wattage bulbs) on sailing trips. In 4 days, 6 of the seven lights have burned out. One light continues to burn at normal brightness. Any ideas or comments on these failures apprecitated. Thanks Tom |
#10
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fish camp light bulb failure
Yeah, vibration, knocking etc.
In Australia our main type of globes are not screw in but bayonet. (push in & 1/4 turn). Most globes here for household type use only have 3 supports holding the element up. It is possible to get ones that have 7 or 8 supports & these can take much more rough treatment. They are designed for "trouble lights" for mechanics etc. Another recent type of globe has just recently taken over the trucking scene here in Aussie is a type of LED light but I doubt if it would be bright enough for your purposes. They last "forever" on truck side light useage. BruceM "Leanne" wrote in message ... "Tom Best" wrote in message om... I would appreciate some help with a 12 volt question. I would think it would be from excessive vibration if they were originally for fixed service in the yard. Leanne |
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