Part 2 Got lumens?
Mini disclaimer here: DO NOT LOOK INTO THE LIGHT!
All gas discharge lamps emit loads of UV, it’s about as bad as looking into welding flash! Wearing eye protection is a must when handling these.
If they go pop you are going to have a bad time!
They also get VERY HOT!
For bench testing I ran the lamp on top of a metal box with a fan & black shroud around it to duct the hot air away.
HIGH VOLTAGE WARNING!
There can be up to 20KV on the pointy end of the lamp plugs.
The run voltage can be around 200v DC which is also not much fun to stick your finger on!
Ok that’s out of the way…
So after fixing my new parts I decided to do some testing & active component analysis, just for fun!
For my test rig I used an 8A 12V linear bench supply with a 0.1ohm 20W resistor in series with the ballast circuit for current waveform measurement.
I had loan of a Tektronix TDS2012B storage scope to make the readings.
Running the unit at 12v has a very brief spike up to 25A <25us then stabilises at 3.93A within 10 seconds or so. The lamp reaches full brightness within 30 seconds.
Inrush spike across 0.1ohm resistor lead at x1
It will keep running down to about 8V, the current gradually increases to ~5A, where it will eventually flicker & go-out.
It won’t re-start till the voltage is removed and higher voltage is re-applied.
It will start at 9v reliably, but the brightness stabilisation time is longer.
Running it up to 14v the average current decreases to 3.2A.
Current ripple at 12v/3.9A:
It generates a fair bit of switching noise, but probably pale in comparison to ignition coils.
Voltage ripple:
The audible noise is almost non-existent, which is surprising given the ‘quality’ of the board.
Many other units I have seen are quite buzzy when powering up from cold.
I inspected the voltage on the lamp supply where the defective 4.7uf cap was attached to, this only rose up to about 70v, so I’m not too sure why they have an oddball 400v cap there.
Maybe it sees some transient spikes during ignition?
Despite the build quality it appears to perform quite well, the lamp starts first time every time without sending the power-supply into current limit.
The lamps are very stable with no flicker (though will be interesting to see how this goes on-car).
The case gets a little warm after a few minutes of use, but not concerning amounts.
Close-up of the running lamp, UV filtered:
Next, onto the vehicle wiring
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