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Thread: Household light globes

  1. #11
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    Many older household appliances such as fridges, stoves etc use incandescent globes which may fit other purposes - check appliance sellers/repairers.
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  2. #12
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    austastar is offline YarnMaster Silver Subscriber
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    Hi , you can series or parallel them to get the load you need.
    Cheers

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    TonyC is offline Wizard Silver Subscriber
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    I still have some incandescents around the house, in lights that only get turned on once or twice a year, or never.

    If you're stuck let me know, and I'll see what they are, and can send some your way.

    Tony

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    BradC is offline Super Moderator
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    I buy all mine at Bunnings. Osram for the halogen replacements and Philips appliance bulbs down to about 15W.
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  5. #15
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    Can't you make up something with an LED and a series of switchable resistors of appropriate value, to make one device with multiple test abilities.
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    BradC is offline Super Moderator
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    No, a dim bulb tester relies on the light bulb being a “non ohmic” resistance. It’s precisely the non linear response of a filament that makes it work, so resistors are no substitute.
    MY08 D3 - The Antichrist - "Permagrimace". Turn the key and play the "will it get me home again" lottery.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Tins View Post
    Funny how our cousins across the Tasman went this route as well, and then reversed it. Well, so I believe.
    Yep, similar legislation to Australia was reversed around 2008ish if i recall with a change of govt. I quickly made a hotbox with incandescents to assist some vinyl ester resin mouldings to cure in the middle of a wet cold winter about 10-12 years ago. I then used them to keep some native orphan ducklings warm till fledged. Don't know what haapened to them after that. 2.5W LEDs prevail in our house these days.

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    Quote Originally Posted by windsock View Post
    Yep, similar legislation to Australia was reversed around 2008ish if i recall with a change of govt. I quickly made a hotbox with incandescents to assist some vinyl ester resin mouldings to cure in the middle of a wet cold winter about 10-12 years ago. I then used them to keep some native orphan ducklings warm till fledged. Don't know what haapened to them after that. 2.5W LEDs prevail in our house these days.
    Ducklings are going to freeze.

    I dunno. I am maybe getting old, but I hate the light from LEDs. Sure, you can get much better ones, warmer, these days, but my eyes don't like them. Better though than the CFLs a certain polly wanted us to all have.

    Anyway, none of them are fit for my purpose. Clear or pearl. 30, 60, 75 or 100watt. Bayonet preferable, as I have the sockets.... sigh.
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    if your dull bulb tester works like I think it does, you can also use nichrome wire and old school carbon heater elements.


    The nice thing about using the nichrome wire is its easy to position the wire mounts to account for the varying required wattages then clip your load onto the required point.
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    Quote Originally Posted by Blknight.aus View Post
    if your dull bulb tester works like I think it does, you can also use nichrome wire and old school carbon heater elements.


    The nice thing about using the nichrome wire is its easy to position the wire mounts to account for the varying required wattages then clip your load onto the required point.
    That would definitely work, Dave. The thing with the dim bulb tester is the visual notification. I think the word "dim" applies to the user, not the tool
    ​JayTee

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