Zelandeth
Flashlight Enthusiast
Well, it's a HID lamp as far as I know anyway. Found this getting chucked out of a local warehouse when they renovated the place, and me being the lighting fanatic I am, I grabbed it. 250W SON-T High Pressure Sodium warehouse lamp, made in England by Fitzgerald Lighting. Sure there's a model number someplace, but I sure can't find it.
Ballast is made by Philips, and has the following number stamped on it, which I believe to be a model number.
BSN 250L 34
9136 251 605
Ignitor, also Philips, appears to be of the SN58 type.
Lamp is also a genuine Philips 250W SON-T unit, rather than a cheaper replacement.
Basically, once I got it home (carrying it, on foot for over two miles, then on a bus for two hours...the darn thing was getting heavy, I set to work cleaning it - was disgistingly dirty. Only one back together did I actually decide to see it it worked. DOES IT EVER! Initially, it only gives out a blueish white light, about the same as a 30W flourescent tube. Leave it for about ten minutes, and it goes through three phases, blue-white, bright orange, yellow, then settles into its normal running pale yellow/white...at an unbelievable brightness level. A real shame that I only have it sitting in the corner of the room as an interesting item, really should be able to think of a use for a light that bright. Well, sure I'll think of something.
Until I got hold of this, I'd never really thought about this type of light. I've got a 250W incandescent halogen lamp in the light shining onto our driveway, and a 500W over the back garden, and the light output from the 500 doesn't even come close to this thing halfway through warmup.
What I want to know, it how much more efficient are these lamps actually? I don't have the equipment to measure luminousity/intensity or anything like that, but I assume that someone else may have a similar lamp and that equipment, and could look into it. This serves no purpose whatsoever, other than satisfying my curiousity.
I might try to get some pics of the now cleaned, polished (and in darn good condition actually) beast idle, during the warmup phases, and at full power, might try to catch the tube when cooling down, which looks pretty cool...er...well, red-orange hot actually.
Another small query, given that most folks here seem to havea fair selection of mainsream and more unusual lights, how common are these things to be found by the private user? Have I for once in my life got lucky and found something rare?
Zel.
Ballast is made by Philips, and has the following number stamped on it, which I believe to be a model number.
BSN 250L 34
9136 251 605
Ignitor, also Philips, appears to be of the SN58 type.
Lamp is also a genuine Philips 250W SON-T unit, rather than a cheaper replacement.
Basically, once I got it home (carrying it, on foot for over two miles, then on a bus for two hours...the darn thing was getting heavy, I set to work cleaning it - was disgistingly dirty. Only one back together did I actually decide to see it it worked. DOES IT EVER! Initially, it only gives out a blueish white light, about the same as a 30W flourescent tube. Leave it for about ten minutes, and it goes through three phases, blue-white, bright orange, yellow, then settles into its normal running pale yellow/white...at an unbelievable brightness level. A real shame that I only have it sitting in the corner of the room as an interesting item, really should be able to think of a use for a light that bright. Well, sure I'll think of something.
Until I got hold of this, I'd never really thought about this type of light. I've got a 250W incandescent halogen lamp in the light shining onto our driveway, and a 500W over the back garden, and the light output from the 500 doesn't even come close to this thing halfway through warmup.
What I want to know, it how much more efficient are these lamps actually? I don't have the equipment to measure luminousity/intensity or anything like that, but I assume that someone else may have a similar lamp and that equipment, and could look into it. This serves no purpose whatsoever, other than satisfying my curiousity.
I might try to get some pics of the now cleaned, polished (and in darn good condition actually) beast idle, during the warmup phases, and at full power, might try to catch the tube when cooling down, which looks pretty cool...er...well, red-orange hot actually.
Another small query, given that most folks here seem to havea fair selection of mainsream and more unusual lights, how common are these things to be found by the private user? Have I for once in my life got lucky and found something rare?
Zel.