Multisubject
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"The only stupid question is the one left unasked"
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I asked a while ago about the specifics of SRS ballasting, and got a little bit of useful info. Since then I have looked at plenty of resources, but I have more questions. Here is a schematic of an SRS fluorescent ballasting circuit:  Here are my questions about it:
1) Construction Specifics: The iron core shown has two isolated windings. I have heard this called a "double choke" before. In my eyes this is implying that both windings are equal. Are both windings the same? If not, what is the approximate turns ratio? 2) Working Principle: I have tried to get a grasp on how this is supposed to work, but I am really having a problem. Can someone explain? 3) Abbreviation Meaning: I think I heard somewhere that SRS stands for "Semi-Resonant Start", but I don't know for sure because everyone always just calls is "SRS". What does it mean?
Thanks!
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LightBulbFun
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I asked a while ago about the specifics of SRS ballasting, and got a little bit of useful info. Since then I have looked at plenty of resources, but I have more questions. Here is a schematic of an SRS fluorescent ballasting circuit:
 Here are my questions about it:
1) Construction Specifics: The iron core shown has two isolated windings. I have heard this called a "double choke" before. In my eyes this is implying that both windings are equal. Are both windings the same? If not, what is the approximate turns ratio?
2) Working Principle: I have tried to get a grasp on how this is supposed to work, but I am really having a problem. Can someone explain?
3) Abbreviation Meaning: I think I heard somewhere that SRS stands for "Semi-Resonant Start", but I don't know for sure because everyone always just calls is "SRS". What does it mean?
Thanks!
Deja Vu? https://www.lighting-gallery.net/index.php?topic=17737.0did you not read the awesome technical pocket booklet I linked in that thread? that explains the fundamental theory/working of Semi-resonant-start quite well  (tho does not go into turns ratios or things like that)
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Multisubject
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@LightBulbFun Yea I was going to go back to that, but the website no longer works. I would like to make my own SRS setup which is why I am asking for more specific details now.
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LightBulbFun
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@LightBulbFun Yea I was going to go back to that, but the website no longer works. I would like to make my own SRS setup which is why I am asking for more specific details now.
ahh well if only someone had the forsight to save such a valulable resource to their computer for safe keeping, so it could be reuploaded somewhere else should the original source go down if only... https://www.lighting-gallery.net/gallery/albums/userpics/10476/Atlas_Technical_Pocket_Book_1966-7.pdf 
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Thanks for sharing that @LightBulbFun! So a series resonant circuit can have higher voltages across the inductor and the capacitor, but when because they are phased differently they add up to the voltage put across them. That makes plenty of sense. But there isn't just a capacitor across the tube or just an inductor, there are both in series, so shouldn't it add up to the supply voltage and no higher? How does it make higher voltage across the tube? I know it works, and I know higher voltages are produced, I just don't get how. No resource that I have read has explained that.
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« Last Edit: November 23, 2025, 08:38:35 PM by Multisubject »
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Medved
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| When the lamp has no discharge, the capacitor current flows via one winding one direction and via the other the opposite direction. So their magnetic fields cancel out, except a small magnetic leakage between the windings. So at the end it is only the small inductance, related to that leakage, which can boost the voltage at least a bit. The thing operates way below the resonance of the capacitor and the leakage inductance (which is the only inductance effectively in series with the cap), so the voltage boost barely makes for the resistive drop on the winding wire resistance. So it is not wrong to say the capacitor has just the mains voltage on it. And that includes also the state when the lamp has ignited, the coupled windings are enforcing that.
But for T12 tubes no voltage boost is actually needed, these ignite on the bare 220V (and above) mains, so the only thing needed is to heat up the cathodes. And the capacitor current does just that, until the lamp ignites. Interesting thing happens after the lamp ignites: The capacitor has still the mains voltage on it (plus minus some small vlotage boost on leakage inductance and resistive drop), similar voltage being on the mains side. That means to quite a big extend the total lamp current splits to these two components, so big part being pushed from both ends of the filament to the arc itself, so quite reducing the resistive heating the lamp filaments experience. It does not cancel out completely, the 90deg phase shift and the different current in each branch won't allow that, but still the current on each of the filament end is less than the total arc current. Compare to the preheat or even the very common current mode preheat HF output (mean electronic ballasts) circuit, where all the current flows from just one filament side.
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LightBulbFun
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Thanks for sharing that @LightBulbFun!
So a series resonant circuit can have higher voltages across the inductor and the capacitor, but when because they are phased differently they add up to the voltage put across them. That makes plenty of sense. But there isn't just a capacitor across the tube or just an inductor, there are both in series, so shouldn't it add up to the supply voltage and no higher? How does it make higher voltage across the tube?
I know it works, and I know higher voltages are produced, I just don't get how. No resource that I have read has explained that.
if I am reading the book right it mentions that effectively the voltage of the capacitor gets added onto the voltage of the secondary winding When the lamp has no discharge, the capacitor current flows via one winding one direction and via the other the opposite direction. So their magnetic fields cancel out, except a small magnetic leakage between the windings. So at the end it is only the small inductance, related to that leakage, which can boost the voltage at least a bit. The thing operates way below the resonance of the capacitor and the leakage inductance (which is the only inductance effectively in series with the cap), so the voltage boost barely makes for the resistive drop on the winding wire resistance. So it is not wrong to say the capacitor has just the mains voltage on it. And that includes also the state when the lamp has ignited, the coupled windings are enforcing that.
But for T12 tubes no voltage boost is actually needed, these ignite on the bare 220V (and above) mains, so the only thing needed is to heat up the cathodes. And the capacitor current does just that, until the lamp ignites. Interesting thing happens after the lamp ignites: The capacitor has still the mains voltage on it (plus minus some small vlotage boost on leakage inductance and resistive drop), similar voltage being on the mains side. That means to quite a big extend the total lamp current splits to these two components, so big part being pushed from both ends of the filament to the arc itself, so quite reducing the resistive heating the lamp filaments experience. It does not cancel out completely, the 90deg phase shift and the different current in each branch won't allow that, but still the current on each of the filament end is less than the total arc current. Compare to the preheat or even the very common current mode preheat HF output (mean electronic ballasts) circuit, where all the current flows from just one filament side.
there is certainly some above-mains-voltage produced by an SRS ballast on a couple 4ft 40W examples I have tested their OCV is about 280V on a Parmar 5ft-8ft 65W-85W one I tested it was about 315V
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Multisubject
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@Medved So you have a transformer with two identical windings (X-Y and Y-Z) connected in series so that their total measured inductance is effectively zero across X-Z. When you apply current across X-Z, the center node Y will gain voltage relative to the points X and Z (assuming X and Z are at equal voltage)? That sort of makes sense, but anything after that I am lost.
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Ash
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| I have a few Eltam SR40 on hand and could make some measurements if you would like, though you will have to wait until i have a window of free time
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Multisubject
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@Ash Thanks so much! I am certainly not in a rush.
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Medved
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@Medved
So you have a transformer with two identical windings (X-Y and Y-Z) connected in series so that their total measured inductance is effectively zero across X-Z. When you apply current across X-Z, the center node Y will gain voltage relative to the points X and Z (assuming X and Z are at equal voltage)? That sort of makes sense, but anything after that I am lost.
Yes, assuming the transformer has ideal coupling, so magnetic flux is exactly the same through both windings, so none could leak between them. In reality you get some nonzero inductance, because the magnetic flux generated by one winding can squeeze without going through the other winding, this property of a transformer uses to be called "leakage inductance". How much it is depends on the exact arrangement. It could be few percents, or even 20..30% if there is really a space between both coils and/or even a magnetic shunt (a piece of iron core designed to provide that path). With standard transformer you want that to be as low as possible, but with SRS some leakage inductance is beneficial, as it boosts the voltage across the lamp for ignition above the mains voltage.
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