electrofelon
Senior Member
- Location
- Cherry Valley NY, Seattle, WA
- Occupation
- Electrician
Electrically wise it may work, but it says neutral meaning someone wanted a grounded conductor. Whether actually needed is debatable.
Technically it could even work off a high leg and noodle, but not something that should be done.
I have no idea if it could somehow tell whether one conductor is grounded or not.
I know the fluorescent ones cannot as I have used them on every voltage available with the 120-277V ballasts available now.
But this is an LED source, not a ballast. Probably wouln't care, although it's also likely an SMPS, so common mode noise might be an issue.The typical linear fluorescent depends on capacitive current through the glass wall to the reflector behind the bulb as part of the starting process. Use an ungrounded source and such a combination will not work. As for L-L from a grounded system, not sure from the theory side.
The typical linear fluorescent depends on capacitive current through the glass wall to the reflector behind the bulb as part of the starting process. Use an ungrounded source and such a combination will not work. As for L-L from a grounded system, not sure from the theory side.
The typical linear fluorescent depends on capacitive current through the glass wall to the reflector behind the bulb as part of the starting process. Use an ungrounded source and such a combination will not work. As for L-L from a grounded system, not sure from the theory side.
Can I feed these with 208 from a 120/208 system?
The typical linear fluorescent depends on capacitive current through the glass wall to the reflector behind the bulb as part of the starting process. Use an ungrounded source and such a combination will not work. As for L-L from a grounded system, not sure from the theory side.
That said, why not just run a hot and neutral (120V) instead of 2 hots for 208V? It's exactly the same number of wires...
...It would be nice if they would fix this little oversight in their color coding ...
The typical linear fluorescent depends on capacitive current through the glass wall to the reflector behind the bulb as part of the starting process. Use an ungrounded source and such a combination will not work. As for L-L from a grounded system, not sure from the theory side.
GD,I know you know this but for the less experienced, the source could very well be grounded but if the fixture itself had no EG to it or was isolated from ground, the lamps would not start. Dependent on humidity etc. IDK how many service calls we had over the years that the non working fixture would work, the second we touched the lamps. Typically old 2 wire or K&T installs.
Or neither, surely?.
The full wave rectifier doesn't care which leg is grounded. The DC output polarity is well established by the DC bridge.
Or neither, surely?