mdcastle
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Thought occurred to me of using my 175 watt lamp and ballast in my photography light instead of an 85 watt CFL. The cone is made of very heavy fabric, with a light fabric scrim about 18 inches from the lamp. Good idea or no?
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wattMaster
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I would assume that the fabric is flame-retardant, but I wouldn't do it unless it's a quick test.
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SLS! (Stop LED Streetlights!)
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Lumex120
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/X rated
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It should be fine, but just to be safe you should use a protected bulb.
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Ash
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It may explode always, there were known cases even with Incandescents exploding and setting fire to stuff
For equipment safety : protected lamp is excellent, unprotected lamp is unprotected but if lamp is high quality and not used past its rated life/in wrong burning position, ballast is high quality, the risk is minimal
For personal safety : you have to have a way to stay safe if the thing catches fire anyway (and it does not have to be caused by the lamp at all). Tools to extinguish a small fire on hand is allways good to have
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tolivac
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18in should be OK-but you should check the outer scrim to make sure it isn't overheating.IE melting or getting burn spots. The only MH violent failures I have had-so far only two.The first-250W probe start MH.Got a used fixture from a electrical surplus-had a well blackened lamp in the light.Turned it on and the bulb chose that time to die.It made a muffled POP and went out-parts of the arcd tube rattled inside the outer bulb-didn't break it.Second-100W MH Philips CMH-arc tube blew and the outer bulb looked like it was shot with a .22 rifle-the bulb was intact but two holes in it where the arc tube blew.Found peices of the tube in the fixture.Didn't hear it go.The ends of the arc tube were still being held by their supports.The Philips bulb came with the light-another yard sale find.Keep looking at the sales for vacuums and lights!
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lights*plus
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Use a lamp with a UV shield.
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Medved
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The explosions may range from nearly nothing, via just an arctube damage, to really smashing the outer and having the hot quartz pieces flying all around. The occurrence of such events is somehow correlated with the use pattern, but still even when you never let the lamp burn for longer than just few hours without cooling down, use a quality lamps and ballasts, still the violent explosion is a thing to not forget about when designing the fixture.
The problem with pretty any fabric is, although it won't sustain fire for longer than a second or so (being flame retardant just means it does not continue to burn on its own, but it does not mean it won't burn at all), the hot quartz pieces will burn holes through it and fall below without loosing any significant amount of its heat, so remain still quite potent to set fire underneath.
Dangerous are bigger chunks of the hot material (except really dusty floor, normal materials need some exposure time and energy to actually catch fire that really spreads), so about 1cm steel wire mesh should be enough to contain most of the fire danger, while still do not block the light, nor the cooling air flow.
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No more selfballasted c***
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Flurofan96
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Celebrating my 10th Anniversary on LG
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If it were me then I would use a shrouded MH lamp
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lights*plus
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Eons ago I was working next to a videographer covering a wedding. He had 4 halogen floods on tall stands lighting the main reception area, one of which had a funny bluer color for a lengthy period. They must've been 1000 watts tungsten halogen. As the wedding entourage was making their entrance, that bluer halogen suddenly turned a brilliant white and exploded with violence. The unit didn't have a glass cover & the center part of the halogen tube went flying like shrapnel glowing brightly red landing on the carpet behing the entourage - luckily missing everyone. The carpet quickly melted leaving a hole where the red-hot 2" piece of tube landed...but that was it as it cooled rather quickly. It's the most violent lamp failure I've seen. And I've seen a couple of M-H lamps pop. The lesson learned: No matter what the flavor, always have bright-hot arc-tubes behind glass.
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dischargecraze
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Tom
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Here's a video of a MH lamp exploding in slow motion. https://youtu.be/jow8fontk4c
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suzukir122
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I've never seen a metal halide lamp explode. I know for a fact that I've seen that video a while back, but I wonder if there are any other videos of it happening, more at random, with the sounds of it happening as well? Makes me want to keep an eye on my 3 20watt metal halide lamps in my room, although all three are in vertical positioning.
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Interests: 1. Motorcycles, Cars, Women, and Lighting (especially fluorescent) 2. Weightlifting/staying extremely athletic 3. Severe Thunderstorms of all kinds 4. Food and drinks. So gimme them bbq ribs Lighting has ALWAYS been a passion of mine. I consider everyone on here to be a friend
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streetlight98
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Mike McCann
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I've never seen one in person either, though I would imagine the larger the lamp the larger the explosion. MH lamps are far more likely to explode at EOL when run horizontally. When run vertically they hardly ever explode, though PSMH is more likely than MH to explode period.
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Please check out my newly-updated website! McCann Lighting Company is where my street light collection is displayed in detail.
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Ash
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I almost seen one. 1KW Probe Start in a floodlight. Been in an area lit with those. Heard a shot from the nearest column (above me) and the area became darker. Looked up to see cooling down Orange hot arctube pieces in a lamp. But i could not tell (at this distance and with another working identical flood next to it) if the outer survived, or popped and just resting on the luminaire lens
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Lodge
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18W Goldeye / 52W R&C LED front door lighting
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Venture metal halide lights rupture very reliably, they normally won't leave an acrylic fixture but the broken bits of the arc tube melt into it real nicely, but I only see this happening to lights that run 24/7 and never ever get shut down and are more then likely well past there rated hours (I didn't install them so I don't know how old they are, but the owners didn't relamp until over half the fixtures were blown so I'm guessing they were pretty old) But then again they might not of liked the dual level lithona motion detector fixture either, I've also seen a couple of Philips 70 Watt ceramic arc tubes blown to bits but they were a protected tube so the tube bits were still inside the bulb.
So if you do this use a open fixture rated light, an relamp well before the EOL hours, lamps are cheaper then fire damage..
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