I've got a situation that has me stumped.
I've got 70 enclosed, pendant mounted fixtures installed in a library. Each has a 175W metal halide lamp. The ballasts are F-can type and are remotely mounted in a closet approximately 200 feet away.
After initial install (renovation project), the lamps started failing (severe color shift and decreased light output) after about 4000-4500 hours. They were all relamped. Same thing is now happening again after 3500-4000 hours of operation. The average lamp life is rated 10,000 and they are installed in the proper burning position.
The lamps operate 6 days a week, 12 hours a day continuous.
Two things I noticed that may be problems with the installation are:
1) The ballasts were mounted directly on a plywood backboard in rows with minimal separation between ballasts. (Heat issues?)
2) The wire gage from the ballast to the fixture is less than what the ballast manufacturer called for. (Voltage drop?)
I sent a couple of ballasts to the ballast manufacturer for testing and they showed no signs of heat problems.
I sent the lamps to the lamp manufacturer and there were no obvious problems with the lamps.
Neither the lamp manufacturer nor the ballast manufacturer could pinpoint the problem.
Anyone have an idea what could be causing the problem?
I've got 70 enclosed, pendant mounted fixtures installed in a library. Each has a 175W metal halide lamp. The ballasts are F-can type and are remotely mounted in a closet approximately 200 feet away.
After initial install (renovation project), the lamps started failing (severe color shift and decreased light output) after about 4000-4500 hours. They were all relamped. Same thing is now happening again after 3500-4000 hours of operation. The average lamp life is rated 10,000 and they are installed in the proper burning position.
The lamps operate 6 days a week, 12 hours a day continuous.
Two things I noticed that may be problems with the installation are:
1) The ballasts were mounted directly on a plywood backboard in rows with minimal separation between ballasts. (Heat issues?)
2) The wire gage from the ballast to the fixture is less than what the ballast manufacturer called for. (Voltage drop?)
I sent a couple of ballasts to the ballast manufacturer for testing and they showed no signs of heat problems.
I sent the lamps to the lamp manufacturer and there were no obvious problems with the lamps.
Neither the lamp manufacturer nor the ballast manufacturer could pinpoint the problem.
Anyone have an idea what could be causing the problem?
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