Uh, did you replace the bulb?
Indeed. This sounds like an intermittent filament. Assuming it's an
incandescent lamp.
Is this a fluorescent lamp? It could be the bulb, or the "ballast".
PeterD wrote:
> Uh, did you replace the bulb?
Or the starter? I've had several bug zappers with replaceable bulbs, that
did not get fixed by replacing them. Then I decided to ignore the "no user
servicable parts inside" stickers, and opened them up. Inside was a regular
floursecent starter in a socket for each bulb.
I've replaced them each time I've replaced the bulbs, which makes a makes it
a $7 repair instead of a $40 replacement.
Yes, these are big bug zappers.
Geoff.
--
Geoffrey S. Mendelson, Jerusalem, Israel g...@mendelson.com N3OWJ/4X1GM
New word I coined 12/13/09, "Sub-Wikipedia" adj, describing knowledge or
understanding, as in he has a sub-wikipedia understanding of the situation.
i.e possessing less facts or information than can be found in the Wikipedia.
I haven't seen too many 18w incandescent lights ...
>> This sounds like an intermittent filament. Assuming it's an
>> incandescent lamp.
>> Is this a fluorescent lamp? It could be the bulb, or the "ballast".
> I haven't seen too many 18W incandescent lights ...
No, but there are low-wattage tungsten-halogen lamps used in such products.
you've never seen any Xmas lights? they're less than 18W per bulb.
and any TEK scope with front panel lights;less than 18W incandescents.
same for any flashlight...
then there's my TENSOR lamp,with a 12v 12W bulb.
--
Jim Yanik
jyanik
at
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dot com
I'm guessing this is a halogen light.
Probably there's oxidation in the socket contacts to the lamp.
You can pull out the bulb, clean (scrape) the pins, and
use a welding tip cleaner wire (kinda like low-bite circular
file wires, used for acetylene torch maintenance) to clean
the socket.
Don't get fingerprints on the bulb, or use any cleaners that might
leave a residue.
That's what everyone seems to be doing -- guessing.
Ask open ended questions -- get open ended answers.
Arghh. It's a LUXO Task Lamp. 18 watt fluorescent, virtually by
definition.
The OP should have said so.
And what model of LUXO Task Lamp. They made a lot of models they
called a 'Task Lamp'.
There is a good chance that it has an electronic ballast.
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Ok I opened up the light..... the bulb is a Syvania Dulux D 18w compact
flourecent 20677 835 avg life 10,000 hrs
But I can not log into www.sylvania.com which is on the box to check the
specs?????
The ballast is made by B and L Tech. http://bplusl.com/html/balnu6.htm
mine is an INstant Start class P Type 1 NU6-1128-NT-1
It has a slight brown spot on it and so does the bulb.
Interesting that the manufact. recommends buying bulbs with EOL protection
built in them (end of life) to protect the ballast.
Maybe this is why my balast died because of the bulb going bad?
Any thoughts would be appreciated.
I can't find the model number on the light - all it has on it is LUXO on the
arm
Take a look at "LUXO Task Lamp" on Google 'Images' to see if you can
find yours.
"don" <d...@panix.com> wrote in message
news:hs4bif$sge$1...@reader1.panix.com...
Sylvania was absorbed by Osram several years ago, and now Dulux is a
trademark of Osram. That´s why you found nothing searching under
Sylvania. Having said that, what you have is just a PL fluorescent
bulb. These bulbs have the starter inside their base, and they work
with an electromagnetic ballast. If the bulb flickers, and takes a
long time to stay on (if it ever stays on) the culprit is the bulb
itself because it is burnt. Indeed, Sylvania as a brand of fluorescent
lamps disappeared more thant ten years ago, so your bulb is pretty old
and probably at the end of its useful lifetime.
Regarding the ballast, if it were burnt, the bulb wouldn´t even
flicker. The brown spot you saw outside of the ballast is probably
some enamel leftover from when it was manufactured and nothing to
worry about. Just replace the bulb and be happy.