lamp life

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carambola

Member
Location
south jersey
i have been having a problem with a particular type of lamp, 50w R20, either burning or blowing out. full relamping (27 cans - juno 4") 2 weeks ago and now 16 are burned out.
i have actual separation of glass to metal on two. none of these are under living space. any ideas or recommendations? 3 separate circuits same panel.
 

hillbilly

Senior Member
Did you check voltage?

A loose or corroded grounded conductor can cause this.

Since it's occuring on 3 seperate circuits, I would check the service ground connection in the breaker panel, and also at the meter base and weather head (POCO).

Of course, it could just be a bad batch of bulbs...say that 3 times really fast:smile:.

Just a idea
steve
 

charlietuna

Senior Member
Are all the lamps from the same supply house??? We once had a similar problem and found the lamps had a "virus" !! Thats what the final find was! Original supplier provided new lamps that burned out within days again -- lamp manufacturer sent us new lamps from the factory and solved the problem??????????
 

jim dungar

Moderator
Staff member
Location
Wisconsin
Occupation
PE (Retired) - Power Systems
as a matter of fact these are all the same brand (sylvania) and from the same supply house.
If the manufacturing line had a problem (i.e. defective cement to hold the glass to the base) then it is likely that the entire shipment to the distributor was affected.
 

charlietuna

Senior Member
On another job we had a large number of PAR38 Mercury lamps which cost around $40.00 a pop ! And they too were found to be deffective. Seems like there were about 80 of them along a entrance median which were all energized the same day and within a week 27 of them failed! Of course the manufacturer blamed everything on the installation and had us jumping thru our butts to monitor voltage-etc-etc.. This happened to be GE ! This case was blamed on a virus in the lamp's gas...
 

Jljohnson

Senior Member
Location
Colorado
I'm not a fan of the R-20 lamps from any manufacturer. I have hd better luck usung the PAR20 lamps, 130 volt rated on our new installs. The intrioduction of a dimmer into the circuit will greatly extend lamp life as well but I'm sure you already knew that.
 

bikeindy

Senior Member
Location
Indianapolis IN
as a matter of fact these are all the same brand (sylvania) and from the same supply house.

I have had so many problems with Sylvania lamps I stopped buying them all together. I once opened a case of 60w standard incandecent lamps and I was trying to screw the lamp in and I tried and tried. For the life of me I didn't know why I was having so much trouble they wouldn't go in after about 3 minutes I took a careful look, and all the lamps were threaded left handed. Now how does this happen? best I can guess is that the threaded part was loaded into the machine upside down during production. I took them back to the supply house and the counter guy thought I was nuts. I pulled out a $100 bill and told him if he could screw it into a socket the money was his. Turned out they had a whole pallet of bad lamps. I could tell more stories about Sylvania lamps but I will never have any new ones I just refuse to use them. I am no fan of GE lamps either.
 

LarryFine

Master Electrician Electric Contractor Richmond VA
Location
Henrico County, VA
Occupation
Electrical Contractor
. . . all the lamps were threaded left handed. Now how does this happen? best I can guess is that the threaded part was loaded into the machine upside down during production.
That wouldn't do it; just like a nut on a bolt, flip it over and it still works. There's no way to left-hand threads accidentally.

That must have been a special order that got re-rounted. Why left-hand threads? I've read that it makes them useles to bulb thieves.

Really.
 
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