Metal halide lights, another green solution!

 by BobS
Recently, when dumpster diving, I found some spot lights. I went back home to get pliers, because I needed some grounded wires + plugs.

After clipping a few wires, I noticed the bulbs did not look at all familiar. NOW I remember discarding many before. They have a ballast (whatever that is). I have seen this type of thing before, always thought it was for some kind of boring office design fluorescent light, for which I have no use...

This time, I took 2 complete fixtures + 'ballast'. Just checking...

Plugging it in ( only 35 Watt), it turned on weakly, subsequently brightened, tuning bright greenish, then very pink, and then VERY bright warm white. At least as bright as my 250 W building lamp!!!

Some internet research revealed, this is a modification of a high pressure mercury vapor lamp. The mercury does give a nasty, greenish- blue hue white light. High pressure sodium lights give a bright pinkish orange light

This type of light has a high pressure bulb with Argon and Mercury, but also some trace metal salts are added. The metals are rare earths, but due to their very high melting points they are added as ' halides': salts of these metals with Chlorine, Bromine and Iodine. This is easier to evaporate, and the electric equilibrium is less caustic to the quartz bulb @ 1500 degrees C.

Turning it on, looking at the changes, the brightening and color changes, it is caused by increasing temperature, different salts evaporate at different temperatures, etc.

Now the practical side........ These lights can be found everywhere!!!!(Europe). Every supermarket, clothing store or showroom has these fixtures! If they go out of business or do some remodeling, the stuff could end up in the dumpster.....

They do require the' ballast', a switching device, which delivers a brief 5000 V pulse to start the thing, and then controls the proper voltage/ amps. Usually, everything is discarded together. Of the 6 discarded fixtures salvaged, all of them still work!

The mount of this particular light is a 'G12'
 
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Step 1: The ballast

The ballast is easily opened with a screwdriver. Some transformers and other components are attached to the main circuit board. a bank of 5 transistors (?) on a heat sink and a separate board with smaller components is attached to the main board. The components may or may be not usable for other projects (I do not have the knowledge..).
andybuda says: Mar 24, 2010. 12:17 PM
iv used these lights be for and they can run very hot if left on for to long 1 hour brake in 24 hour should be enough but they do have a safety feature in the circuit to protect against the light being switched off and then back on when the bulb is to hot
i know of some 1 that had the light running all the time in the end the transformer just melted not the best of ideas and could be very dangerous
cx420ns says: Sep 24, 2009. 10:45 AM
um yea
when i saw 'green' and 'metal halide' i thought this was going to be a pot growing instructable =p
metal halide is the best light for it, that and HPS ;)
BobS (author) in reply to cx420nsNov 28, 2009. 8:46 AM
HPS, high pressure sodium, is very similar: high voltage, high temperature strips the metal vapor of many electrons. HPS, as well as many metal halide lights have a cool (like half of the sun's surface) color temperature: 'warm colors'.
A high color temperature (think of a welding torch: 2X the sun's surface temp) looks cold to us; interesting paradox!

Some plants use their internal clock (days after germination), others use day length (strawberries vs. chrysanthemums), and some seem to use color temperature as a signal to flower. Most likely: clear days in early summer: white sunlight; dusty days in late summer: reddish light, all in the countries of origin. Look at some press photos of Afghanistan to see what I mean


abadfart says: Jul 16, 2009. 1:57 PM
wold this work to replace a projector bulb??
BobS (author) in reply to abadfartNov 28, 2009. 8:30 AM
Beamers (video projectors) use a metal halide lamp as a light source. The color temperature is higher (more bluish white) than most common display lights.

The socket will probably not fit, but if it can be replaced, it should work great!

But please take the time to check for overheating!!!
peterlonz says: Oct 7, 2009. 9:02 PM
You are obviously a very experienced & well qualified Dumpster Diver.
I scored one of these & the damn bulb was broken. As I recall there was a ballast & a thing called an igniter. I have thee bits but no bulb. All the components are very expensive so if you are't lucky it may not be worth hanging on to the other bits.
Any Dumpster Diving hints would be well appreciated, most of the Dumpsters around here get locked to stop people disposing of trash & filling up the Dumpster.
BobS (author) in reply to peterlonzNov 28, 2009. 8:08 AM
The same thing is happening in Holland, and it is very enraging!!! I have seen perfectly intact tropical hardwood window sills being cut up so they could be fit into the dumpster. True, when a dumpster stands for a long time, people tend to put  stuff in it which the city does not take, like bricks, etc. But now, nothing gets taken out anymore, and due to the now confined space, more air pockets remain. It is very anti recycling and re-use, and should be forbidden.

I wish I had a portable welder!!!! The only thing I do now is leave lots of trash on top of the locked containers.

Nowadays, when I need parts, I take some minor leftovers from a disassembly project to the city waste disposal and hope to find what I'm looking for (and/ or other useful stuff). 

But like you say, I am very experienced, took stuff from the trash since i was 5 years old (in 1958...). This trend discourages recycling!
pcfixit says: Nov 9, 2009. 5:00 PM
Nice 'ible. I do belive the metal disk is some form of thermal cutout, but i could be wrong.
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