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markimhoff:
As I previously said so called dimmable CFLs have very limited dimming range.
However, a good dimmer for these or incandescent lamps is the Lutron SF-10P. This an overpriced dimmer but has the advantage that it requires (or uses) full input 120 V supply voltage to power the electronics in the dimmer. My description of this would be a "three wire" dimmer. But Lutron does not not know what I mean by that terminology. What I mean is that hot and neutral must both be supplied as input to the dimmer and the third wire is the dimmed output. This is in contrast of what I call a "two wire" dimmer where power to the electronics in the dimmer is supplied thru the load.
This SF-10P works at any dimmer position with or without any load. This is possible because both neutral and hot are required at the input to the dimmer to supply power to the electronics. At full on a complete full cycle does not occur. Triggering starts at about 24% of 180 deg or 43 deg. This really does not have a very great effect on maximum brightness. The trigger point at minimum dimming is about 80% of 180 or 144 deg. On an incandescent this reduces the light output to about 5% of the full on brightness.
Another feature of a "three wire" dimmer is that if at minimum setting and after input power is lost that on return of power the dimmer functions at its original setting. Some "two wire" dimmers will not restart at low dimming levels after power returns.
The Lutron data sheet for this dimmer can be found by going to
www.lutron.com and then put 032-047c in the search box, and init search. Then you have to pick the link to the .pdf and open it.
There are actually 5 wires to the SF-10P. One additional wire is the EGC to the metalwork. The other is a switched full voltage output that goes to the dimmable ballast to provide constant power to the fluorescent filaments independent of the current thru the fluorescent.
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