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Falky foo December 21st 04 09:12 AM

no actually it's straight incandescent I'm looking for. I understand that
12v fluorescent and 120v fluorescent would be two different beasts entirely.

I'm figuring that an incandescent fixture is really nothing more than a
fancy switch. Whereas a florescent has the ballast, etc.




"Gene Kearns" wrote in message
...
On Mon, 20 Dec 2004 20:32:21 GMT, Short Wave Sportfishing
wrote:



I assumed that this wasn't florescent but a straight filament bulb.

Any fixture can handle any voltage if it's a filament bulb.


True.... the "Target" thing made me assume that it was probably
fluorescent.... I could be wrong...

--



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Eisboch December 21st 04 11:59 AM


Falky foo wrote in message
.. .

no actually it's straight incandescent I'm looking for. I understand that
12v fluorescent and 120v fluorescent would be two different beasts

entirely.

I'm figuring that an incandescent fixture is really nothing more than a
fancy switch. Whereas a florescent has the ballast, etc.


The only thing you need to watch out for is this:

A fixture designed for a 120 volt bulb will need to handle 10 times the
current when using a 12 volt bulb, assuming the same wattage. A 100 watt,
120 volt bulb will draw just under an amp. A 12 volt, 100 watt bulb will
draw over 8 amps. The wiring within the fixture must be capable of handling
the higher current, regardless of the voltage rating.

Eisboch (trying to prevent fires)






Short Wave Sportfishing December 21st 04 04:02 PM

On Tue, 21 Dec 2004 11:59:17 GMT, "Eisboch"
wrote:


Falky foo wrote in message
. ..

no actually it's straight incandescent I'm looking for. I understand that
12v fluorescent and 120v fluorescent would be two different beasts

entirely.

I'm figuring that an incandescent fixture is really nothing more than a
fancy switch. Whereas a florescent has the ballast, etc.


The only thing you need to watch out for is this:

A fixture designed for a 120 volt bulb will need to handle 10 times the
current when using a 12 volt bulb, assuming the same wattage. A 100 watt,
120 volt bulb will draw just under an amp. A 12 volt, 100 watt bulb will
draw over 8 amps. The wiring within the fixture must be capable of handling
the higher current, regardless of the voltage rating.


Good point - I wasn't thinking.

Later,

Tom


Falky foo December 21st 04 08:58 PM

Thanks for the 'fo (that's short for 'info'). I'll keep em 10-20 watts.


"Eisboch" wrote in message
...

Falky foo wrote in message
.. .

no actually it's straight incandescent I'm looking for. I understand

that
12v fluorescent and 120v fluorescent would be two different beasts

entirely.

I'm figuring that an incandescent fixture is really nothing more than a
fancy switch. Whereas a florescent has the ballast, etc.


The only thing you need to watch out for is this:

A fixture designed for a 120 volt bulb will need to handle 10 times the
current when using a 12 volt bulb, assuming the same wattage. A 100 watt,
120 volt bulb will draw just under an amp. A 12 volt, 100 watt bulb will
draw over 8 amps. The wiring within the fixture must be capable of

handling
the higher current, regardless of the voltage rating.

Eisboch (trying to prevent fires)









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