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Help from 110 to 240v

E

etaoin

Jan 1, 1970
0
Starting with two 110v spotlights...will this work
in Europe on a 240v system? (My knowledge is not even
basic, so be kind.)

If the plug is removed from each light and each (+) is spliced
to each (-) and these ends are assembled to a European 2-prong
plug, will both of the 500w lights turn on safely? (Can't use a
single 1000w light because illumination on an object to be
photographed must come from two separated sources.)

Thanks,
Armand
 
P

PaoloS

Jan 1, 1970
0
If the plug is removed from each light and each (+) is spliced
to each (-) and these ends are assembled to a European 2-prong
plug, will both of the 500w lights turn on safely? (Can't use a
single 1000w light because illumination on an object to be
photographed must come from two separated sources.)

You said + and -. Are you sure the light are AC powered? If so, in
theory you can do this, but I'm not so sure....
If not they can't work with AC power...
bye
 
T

Tom MacIntyre

Jan 1, 1970
0
Starting with two 110v spotlights...will this work
in Europe on a 240v system? (My knowledge is not even
basic, so be kind.)

If the plug is removed from each light and each (+) is spliced
to each (-) and these ends are assembled to a European 2-prong
plug, will both of the 500w lights turn on safely? (Can't use a
single 1000w light because illumination on an object to be
photographed must come from two separated sources.)

Thanks,
Armand

I am guessing a bit, but I would say splicing one + to one -, then
attaching the other + and - to their respective blades on the plug is
the correct solution. That puts them in series, so the voltage is
divided in half. You really have to be sure about your insulation
also.

++++++++Light------------+++++++Light------------

Tom
 
M

Mike Ring

Jan 1, 1970
0
I am guessing a bit, but I would say splicing one + to one -, then
attaching the other + and - to their respective blades on the plug is
the correct solution. That puts them in series, so the voltage is
divided in half. You really have to be sure about your insulation
also.

++++++++Light------------+++++++Light------------

Tom

I think you're right, if I read the OP right, Armand is proposing to wire
them in parallel, which will blow both very fast.

mike r
 
J

John G

Jan 1, 1970
0
My reading of the OP is that he will put the lamps in Parralel as you say.
This will:-
a, destroy the lamps and
b, probably contravene various safety standards.

The proper and SAFE thing to do is get 2 500watt 220 volt lamps in
commercial housings and plug them into a power distribution board.

In some countries removing plugs is frowned upon and by one who does not
understand series and parralel is decidely dangerous.
 
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