Yojevol
Clocking on
One of the first jobs I set myself in our new abode is to replace all the bulbs in the property with LED's
I started on the kitchen which has 2 arrays of 6 GU10 halogen's {probably 50W)
I replaced one and the new LCD seemed acceptable for brightness compared with the old bulbs.
I replaced a 2nd one and that seemed okay as well.
I then replaced the whole lot without further testing.
On switching on the 2 arrays it was immediately obvious there was a serious problem
All the LCD's flashed on for an instant at full brightness then continued to glow at a very low intensity.
Elsewhere in the bungalow there is a single pendant with 4 GU10 sockets. I put the new LCD's in there and all was fine. So, not the bulbs.
Back in the kitchen I played around with mixtures of LCD's an halogens and discovered that with just one halogen in each array, the 5 LCD's would light satisfactorily and be stable.
Time to get the multimeter out and have a look at the voltages apparent. I checked the bulb fittings and the light switches - very illuminating, or maybe not.
245V coming in from the consumer unit - tick
With all 12 LCD's in situ (barely illuminated) the voltages in the supplies from the switches were 185 & 174V resp.
With one halogen in each array (good illumination) the voltages were depressed a little further to 175 & 164V
With all the halogens in place, voltages are also at 175 and 164
These readings also apparent at the switch terminals.
The only explanation I can come up with is that somewhere in each of the 2 circuits there are a pair (or maybe more) of light fittings that are in series rather than in parallel.
It is apparent that the fault was there from the beginning but the halogens seemingly operated satisfactorily at the reduced voltage.
Is it the case that the LCD's, with their internal transformers, cannot tolerate the reduced voltages?
If my theory is correct then it's going to be one hell of a job checking the wiring under a foot of insulation, yes a foot.
Can anybody come up with any other explanation?
Brian
I started on the kitchen which has 2 arrays of 6 GU10 halogen's {probably 50W)
I replaced one and the new LCD seemed acceptable for brightness compared with the old bulbs.
I replaced a 2nd one and that seemed okay as well.
I then replaced the whole lot without further testing.
On switching on the 2 arrays it was immediately obvious there was a serious problem
All the LCD's flashed on for an instant at full brightness then continued to glow at a very low intensity.
Elsewhere in the bungalow there is a single pendant with 4 GU10 sockets. I put the new LCD's in there and all was fine. So, not the bulbs.
Back in the kitchen I played around with mixtures of LCD's an halogens and discovered that with just one halogen in each array, the 5 LCD's would light satisfactorily and be stable.
Time to get the multimeter out and have a look at the voltages apparent. I checked the bulb fittings and the light switches - very illuminating, or maybe not.
245V coming in from the consumer unit - tick
With all 12 LCD's in situ (barely illuminated) the voltages in the supplies from the switches were 185 & 174V resp.
With one halogen in each array (good illumination) the voltages were depressed a little further to 175 & 164V
With all the halogens in place, voltages are also at 175 and 164
These readings also apparent at the switch terminals.
The only explanation I can come up with is that somewhere in each of the 2 circuits there are a pair (or maybe more) of light fittings that are in series rather than in parallel.
It is apparent that the fault was there from the beginning but the halogens seemingly operated satisfactorily at the reduced voltage.
Is it the case that the LCD's, with their internal transformers, cannot tolerate the reduced voltages?
If my theory is correct then it's going to be one hell of a job checking the wiring under a foot of insulation, yes a foot.
Can anybody come up with any other explanation?
Brian