https://www.lightup.com/led-t8-tube-7w-directdrive-keystone.html?utm_source=googlepepla&utm_medium=adwords&id=1535745912911&gclid=Cj0KCQjw94WZBhDtARIsAKxWG-8BEKh8oxyYgvVPmU8_6ZgBytPMr_0DkBqLEdJWSUgDm2ycuOf_c-kaAoBmEALw_wcB
You need ^ That One! At least now.
"Plug & Play" is designed to take the strike-voltage for a fluorescent lamp. And without it, it will not light properly. Direct-Wire uses wall-plate voltage.
Save the one you have for another use.
Peter Wieck
Melrose Park, PA
I replaced the ballast and fluorescent tubes in a bathroom fixture with LED replacements. I'm gradually doing this to all my fluorescent fixtures as they stop working. I always buy direct wire and rewire, otherwise I'm just waiting for the ballast tofail eventually. But this is my first 18 inch, the others have all been 4 foot. And it was very hard to find an 18 inch LED tube.
The Amazon description clearly says to rewire. The instructions with the tubes clearly said to rewire. The tubes say Plug-Play and are from China. So I have rewired, though a bit confused over which was right. They turn on but are very dim, nothinglike I expected. I emailed the manufacturer and to my surprise got a reply, that said they are PlugPlay and I should not rewire, and they do not work with all fixtures.
Maybe I can learn something. Will Plug and Play fail if direct wired? What is different about the circuitry, and why are some ballasts compatible and others not?
I read the Amazon reviews before buying. The negative ones were mostly from people who had not read the instructions and had not rewired.
LED tubes internally are wired to the supply at one end, the other end
is made as a short circuit - so that the LED tube can be used as a plug
and play for a florescent tube if the starter (and ballast) is also
replaced with a short.
Please refer to a standard fluorescent wiring diagram to see how this
series wiring works, and then maintain the existing wiring so that the supply is still externally supplied to both ends in _series_
(If you have done that, probably wise to scribble a warning with a
permanent pen to remind ye which end of the tube should be fitted to
supply)
--
Adrian C
Thanks for the reply. This is only partially correct though, unless I'm misunderstanding.neutral connected to that end, and the tombstone at the other end was just mechanical support with no wiring to it. This is the way the installation instructions read for all single end LED tubes. It's also the simplest and easiest to rewire, you
I've been replacing fluorescent tubes in my house and shed for a while now, only a couple to go. The first several I did were exactly as you say, the LED tubes were single end powered. This required an unshunted tombstone at one end, with hot and
If I understand what you are trying to say, you would use an unshunted tombstone at the powered end, continue the circuit to a shunted tombstone at the other end, then back to the powered end, then to neutral???
But I've also used the double end LED tubes, where you run hot to one end and neutral to the other, and I tend to think these are safer. This is how the installation instructions read for the PlugPlay ones I mistakenly bought. The instructions forthis type say either use shunted tombstones or pigtail the wire to both contacts of a shunted one. I'm not sure why that is necessary, seems like one pin would be enough.
It seems to me that direct wire tubes would be easier to design and manufacture than PlugPlay, and my evidence is that not all ballasts are compatible.
LED tubes internally are wired to the supply at one end, the other end
is made as a short circuit - so that the LED tube can be used as a plug
and play for a florescent tube if the starter (and ballast) is also
replaced with a short.
Adrian Caspersz wrote:magnetic ballast fail.
LED tubes internally are wired to the supply at one end, the other end
is made as a short circuit - so that the LED tube can be used as a plug
and play for a florescent tube if the starter (and ballast) is also replaced with a short.
Some led tubes are designed to work with a magnetic ballast in circuit so they do not need rewiring. I consider that a safe approach since the tombstones are the same, a normal flurescent tube could be installed in the future. I have never seen a
In article <04d821b3-e5f9-44dd...@googlegroups.com>,I have never seen a magnetic ballast fail.
JERON...@terra.es says...
Adrian Caspersz wrote:
I have seen lots of them fail. However this in buildings that have
hundreds if not thousands of them. Replaced lots of them over the
years.
The LED replacements did not come ito use before I retired. The
elecrtronics were not in use for too many years before I retired so can
not coment on their lifetime.
Ralph Mowery wrote:5 years.
The LED replacements did not come ito use before I retired. The elecrtronics were not in use for too many years before I retired so can not coment on their lifetime.I am disappointed with their reliability. I maintain the lights in my bloc of flats and the lift lights years ago used CFL GU10 type bulbs. They were rated a lifetime of 20000h which are 2.5 years as they are always on and they actually lasted about 3.
Three years ago I installed GU10 led bulbs with a rated lifetime of 50000h, that's 6 years! After two years both bulbs failed with blinking lights. They did not even reach the rated lifetime of CFL. I also see many TV led backlights fail more oftenthan CFL. For now I consider CFL quite more reliable than led.
Ralph Mowery wrote:years.
The LED replacements did not come ito use before I retired. The
elecrtronics were not in use for too many years before I retired so can
not coment on their lifetime.
I am disappointed with their reliability. I maintain the lights in my bloc of flats and the lift lights years ago used CFL GU10 type bulbs. They were rated a lifetime of 20000h which are 2.5 years as they are always on and they actually lasted about 3.5
Three years ago I installed GU10 led bulbs with a rated lifetime of 50000h, that's 6 years! After two years both bulbs failed with blinking lights. They did not even reach the rated lifetime of CFL. I also see many TV led backlights fail more often thanCFL. For now I consider CFL quite more reliable than led.
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