"Victor Roberts" <xxx@lighting-research.com> wrote in message
news:ij32049pns7hkkvennkun89auh528na4hv@4ax.com...
On Fri, 11 Apr 2008 21:27:22 +0100, "JB" <JB@Nospam.co.uk
wrote:
Wandering round the Light & Building show at Frankfurt this week and I'll
admit to spending rather more time than I exepcted in the 'Chinese Halls'.
Small booths with very, very interesting lighting technology. Being a
lamp/ballast engineer by training, I have a keen interest in new lamp or
gear technologies. Saw the Luxim lamp >close up< for the first time.
Lovely
small 'arctube' but embedded in massive block of ceramic/ali
heatsink/microwave generator. I think I prefer working with the old
Sulphur
lamp despite it's problems.
I did however come across one of my 'holy grails': Ultra miniature ceramic
metal halides. These are sub-10W arc tubes which are manufactured by
Yasuhiro Electrical in China (but I believe the company's director/CTO is
Japanese?). These lamps are a thing of beauty. Unfortunately technical
data
is very thin on the ground but I did see working samples. I'd love to know
what the lamp life and spectral properties are though. This was being kept
very much under wraps.
Another lamp technology which seems to have been progressed further by the
Chniese is induction lamps. I've used the Philips QL and Osram Endura in
luminaire designs since their first launch years ago now. I'd always
wanted
more power/lumens for our specific applications (HID replacement in
difficult maintenance areas), but the best we could get was ~15000Lm.
Three
Chinese manufacturers were offering 400W (~35kLm) lamp/ballast packages
and
even a 200/250W 'QL' type source (with their own US Patent already granted
too!!). I've got some samples coming over next month so we'll see how they
shape up in the integrating sphere/spectrometer. I suppose the real test
will be how well they meet the "100,000hrs" lamplife claims. I'll probably
be dead and buried before I get those life tests done.
On the whole, I'd say the Far Eastern manufacturers have made a very big
leap forward in techmnology in the last 3-4yrs and the gap between them
and
the Euro/US manufacturers is closing very, very rapidly indeed.
Ineteresting
times........
JB
Thanks for the info. Sounds very interesting. Do you have a
patent number for the QL-type lamp? I find it a bit
remarkable that there is anything left to patent in these
lamps, other than small tweaks that have little value but
might be used to get a patent.
I assume the lamps operated at 2.54 MHz. Can you confirm?
Do they claim to meet CISPR and FCC regs? (I've seen other
Chinese induction lamps that have no EMI control at all and
would fail dramatically under FCC Part 18.
Back in the lab now so here are the links:
Induction lamps:
www.amko.co.tw (QL and Endura type induction lamps)
www.fjjk.com (Endura and QL types. 'QL' type US patent no. US6,940.232B1)
CMH:
www.yasuhiro-elec.com (miniature ceramic metal halides. Dr. Koichi Hayashi.)
JB
Thanks. The first link does not work.