> Somebody must have tried this!
Two bulbs, One ballast. In series. Take 1.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7jxNFLz2n7k
Two bulbs, One ballast. In series. Take 2.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z1kboF8coQ8
Two bulbs, One ballast. In parallel.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-YeiIkztOG8
Not sure why I said "2 ballast in parallel...". Me is useless....
Stuff used:
2x 35watt 6000k H3 bulbs.
1x 45watt ballast.
1x fluke multimeter
1x jaycar special multimeter
Poor little 45 watt ballast trying to attempt to produce 70 watts to fire and run the two bulbs. Cant do it.
* Only one ballast was killed during this experiment *
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24v hid balast to 12v please help
Moderator: -Scott-
I have actually tried it..... as I had a single ballast and 2 lamps.
Much to my surprise the single ballast fired the tubes connected in parallel but wouldn't maintain the arc. A bit more exploration revealed that the starting circuitry is designed to "force" ignition under quite unfavorable circumstances, but once fired the discharge current is closely controlled.
So they would strike but not run. This was with a BOSCH ballast they are pretty well engineered but a cheaper one might not be so "carefull" with operating conditions... - however thats speculation.
Its a bugger having no quite enough of a good thing.
Much to my surprise the single ballast fired the tubes connected in parallel but wouldn't maintain the arc. A bit more exploration revealed that the starting circuitry is designed to "force" ignition under quite unfavorable circumstances, but once fired the discharge current is closely controlled.
So they would strike but not run. This was with a BOSCH ballast they are pretty well engineered but a cheaper one might not be so "carefull" with operating conditions... - however thats speculation.
Its a bugger having no quite enough of a good thing.
( usual disclaimers )
It seemed like a much better idea when I started it than it does now.
It seemed like a much better idea when I started it than it does now.
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