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Fluorescent Fixture Puzzle

J

John Keiser

Jan 1, 1970
0
My 30 year-old 4 bulb kitchen fixture recently began having startup issues.
I changed the bulbs [el-cheapo ACE sale 40W bulbs] but the problem
continued: often heaters glow but bulbs would not light unless I flicked the
switch quickly on-off-on. Once lite, all was fine.

Rather than buy an expensive ballast, I did what I've done before: I bought
the $10 2 bulb shoplight special at Home Depot and used the guts to replace
one of the two ballasts/sockets in the kitchen fixture.

The same ballast and ACE bulbs works fine elsewhere. But in the kitchen I
still have the startup issue.

Ground checked solid.

Connections are solidly pigtailed.

AC is 124 volts.

What am I'm missing here? I don't see any reason t buy a new $125 4 bulb
fixture. Are ACE bulbs lower quality these days? Bad luck on the ballast?

I know this is simple stuff. But thanks for any comments.
 
Are you sure you have the new ballast wired to the same two tubes and
not somehow cross-wired to one end of a tube still on the other
ballast. Otherwise, I have done exactly what you did with no problms.
Do you have the input wires reversed? Even if not, maybe you should
try the fixture on the benchgtop with the wires to the new ballast
reversed, there is a capacitance effect that they use to help start the
bulbs, and a reversal of wires negates the starting effect. If all
else fails, reinstall the ballast in the cheap fisture to make sure it
still works.

H. R. (Bob) Hofmann
 
John said:
My 30 year-old 4 bulb kitchen fixture recently began having startup issues.
I changed the bulbs [el-cheapo ACE sale 40W bulbs] but the problem
continued: often heaters glow but bulbs would not light unless I flicked the
switch quickly on-off-on. Once lite, all was fine.

Rather than buy an expensive ballast, I did what I've done before: I bought
the $10 2 bulb shoplight special at Home Depot and used the guts to replace
one of the two ballasts/sockets in the kitchen fixture.

The same ballast and ACE bulbs works fine elsewhere. But in the kitchen I
still have the startup issue.

Ground checked solid.

Connections are solidly pigtailed.

AC is 124 volts.

What am I'm missing here? I don't see any reason t buy a new $125 4 bulb
fixture. Are ACE bulbs lower quality these days? Bad luck on the ballast?

I know this is simple stuff. But thanks for any comments.

Hey John,
You can get instant start electronic ballasts for <$30 for 4 bulbs.
Combine that with 4 new 32 Watt T-8s and get more light, less power, no
flickering. You also have color temp options which can be very nice in
the kitchen.
GG
 
J

James Sweet

Jan 1, 1970
0
John Keiser said:
My 30 year-old 4 bulb kitchen fixture recently began having startup issues.
I changed the bulbs [el-cheapo ACE sale 40W bulbs] but the problem
continued: often heaters glow but bulbs would not light unless I flicked the
switch quickly on-off-on. Once lite, all was fine.

Rather than buy an expensive ballast, I did what I've done before: I bought
the $10 2 bulb shoplight special at Home Depot and used the guts to replace
one of the two ballasts/sockets in the kitchen fixture.

The same ballast and ACE bulbs works fine elsewhere. But in the kitchen I
still have the startup issue.

Ground checked solid.

Connections are solidly pigtailed.

AC is 124 volts.

What am I'm missing here? I don't see any reason t buy a new $125 4 bulb
fixture. Are ACE bulbs lower quality these days? Bad luck on the ballast?

I know this is simple stuff. But thanks for any comments.


Those cheap shoplights have garbage ballasts, that's one of the first parts
they cheapened up. I assume this is the rapid start type and not the old
preheat style? Ground to the reflector is very important, but you said you
checked that. Since you used a junk ballast I would recommend replacing that
with something good, there's a reason real ballasts cost more. Personally
I've been using Advance T8 electronic ballasts. The 4 lamp style is under 20
bucks. You have to buy T8 tubes instead of your old T12s but you get more
light, less power consumption, no flicker and instant starting.
 
J

James Sweet

Jan 1, 1970
0
Hey John,
You can get instant start electronic ballasts for <$30 for 4 bulbs.
Combine that with 4 new 32 Watt T-8s and get more light, less power, no
flickering. You also have color temp options which can be very nice in
the kitchen.
GG

Wow I should have read that before I replied, you even used almost exactly
the same wording.

Actually though there's a wide variety of phosphors available in the old
style T12 tubes, including some not found often in T8, but for some reason
the T8 stuff is almost all premium trichromatic phosphors so you don't have
to special order stuff other than the basic CW and WW halophosphate stuff.

One thing to look for is pick up 80 series stuff with 80+ CRI, the color
rendering really is much nicer than the 70 series stuff. Most of them are
numbered in a way that makes it simple, F32T8-835 for example is
fluorescent, 32 Watt, tubular 8 eighths inch diameter, CRI 80+ with a color
temperature of 3500K.
 
M

Markus

Jan 1, 1970
0
John,

Check the sockets, had one out in my barn that drove me crazy, did the
same thing, got a cheapo shoplite from homedepot for les than 15
bucks, switched out the guts, found one bulb heater wasn't making
connection. disconnected the power for the umpteenth time and scraped
the socket contacts, works like a champ. A quick check would be to
put in all the bulbs, fire it up for 5 minutes then take out the bulbs
to see if all of the ends are warm from the filaments. Oh yea, my
barn gets real cold in the winter, learned to stay away from those 34
watt bulbs, they don't work very well when cold. There is only a few
volts at the filaments, 6 volts I believe or less, however, they sit
around 600Volts above ground, so , be careful if you think about using
a meter to measure the filament voltage. Mine all checked fine,
contact was corroded in the spot where the pins rest when the bulb is
locked in.


Take care,

Markus
 
G

Gail Storm

Jan 1, 1970
0
Not saying this is the answer but we had a similar problem with a basement
light. Worked for years and started to have same symptoms as you described. If
we touched the fixture it would start. Found that the fixture was not grounded.
Your mileage may vary.
 
J

James Sweet

Jan 1, 1970
0
Gail Storm said:
Not saying this is the answer but we had a similar problem with a basement
light. Worked for years and started to have same symptoms as you described. If
we touched the fixture it would start. Found that the fixture was not grounded.
Your mileage may vary.

Normally that'd be my first guess, he did say the ground was ok though.
 

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