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KevinCU

Senior member
Jan 14, 2009
896
0
0
So this would be a bitch?

:p

'sup, Kevin?

Take it away! We actually did some log-log and semilog plots in my MATLAB class a few weeks ago so that isn't too scary. :p

I'm actually procrastinating and avoiding doing my power/transformer homework that's due tomorrow. On the plus side I do have an interview with a well-known tire manufacturer next Tuesday. ;)
 

highland145

Lifer
Oct 12, 2009
43,973
6,338
136
Take it away! We actually did some log-log and semilog plots in my MATLAB class a few weeks ago so that isn't too scary. :p

I'm actually procrastinating and avoiding doing my power/transformer homework that's due tomorrow. On the plus side I do have an interview with a well-known tire manufacturer next Tuesday. ;)
Bridgestone plant is 15 min from me, along with Kimberly Clark....welcome. Micheline is ~45min.
 

KevinCU

Senior member
Jan 14, 2009
896
0
0
Bridgestone plant is 15 min from me, along with Kimberly Clark....welcome. Micheline is ~45min.

I didn't know that. :O I'm actually interviewing with Goodyear up in Fayetteville. There's also a Michelin plant that is maybe 10 minutes from campus but I didn't see any internships/co-op available.
 

highland145

Lifer
Oct 12, 2009
43,973
6,338
136
I didn't know that. :O I'm actually interviewing with Goodyear up in Fayetteville. There's also a Michelin plant that is maybe 10 minutes from campus but I didn't see any internships/co-op available.
When I traveled, ~Laurens, SC, test track (banked) by the highway..would have loved to try that out...with someone elses' car.
 

alkemyst

No Lifer
Feb 13, 2001
83,769
19
81
If I want something hot with electricity the bish better be making grilled cheese.
 

Rubycon

Madame President
Aug 10, 2005
17,768
485
126
It was probably pulling around 30A at 230V 50Hz. Not that bad. You can see the lights dim when he throws that switch. Now if the lamp was connected across the line the inrush current would have been huge! It will run off a 50A circuit (time delay or motor rating required) but the initial inrush would be perceived on the entire block! (UPS switching to battery on his neighbor's PC, for example!)
 

sun_tzu

Member
Oct 17, 2012
26
0
0
Technically speaking, lightbulbs produce more light the less efficient they are. Resistance is what heats up the coils and makes the gas inside react... something like that.
 

Mr. Pedantic

Diamond Member
Feb 14, 2010
5,027
0
76
Technically speaking, lightbulbs produce more light the less efficient they are. Resistance is what heats up the coils and makes the gas inside react... something like that.

:p

Unless you're using your light bulbs to heat your house, 'efficiency' in this context implicitly means light energy/total energy.
 

Red Squirrel

No Lifer
May 24, 2003
70,663
13,834
126
www.anyf.ca
IIRC most lights on towers where required are Xenon flashtubes. They flash at high power during the day and at night switch to a psuedo-CW mode where they turn on briefly (not a flash) and are much dimmer. Radio towers use incandescent bulbs - as high as 600W. They are undervolted and have a direct current soft (inrush eliminator) circuit to enhance MTBF. LEDs are taking over and can function like the aforementioned Xenon strobes and have a traditional "glow on - glow off" of incandescent beacons without the maintenance. RE: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C_-7Qp7uzbQ

Damn that looks like fun as hell! Crazy there's no safety harness though but I see their point. Having to constantly unclamp/clamp would really get tiring.

Then get to the top, and realize the bulb is still in the truck. :biggrin:
 

silverpig

Lifer
Jul 29, 2001
27,703
12
81
Technically speaking, lightbulbs produce more light the less efficient they are. Resistance is what heats up the coils and makes the gas inside react... something like that.

I think the opposite is generally true.

More resistance = more heat.

More heat = higher blackbody radiation temperature.

Higher blackbody radiation temperature = more light*

* - for lightbulbs this is true because you're not going to get into the temperatures where the peak of the blackbody spectrum is in the UV with a tungsten filament

A really shitty lightbulb is called a stove element. Tons of power, faint red glow.
 

Rubycon

Madame President
Aug 10, 2005
17,768
485
126
A really shitty lightbulb is called a stove element. Tons of power, faint red glow.

That's power density at work. Increase forward voltage and it will turn orange and yellow and...eventually it will burn out! It ends often in a fanfare of various spectra and of course the arc has much more visible light too!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=atomTjWOLtU

An electric bulb will also produce more lumens with a noticeable shift to high color temperature. Its life will be shortened greatly as well. Switching to a quartz capsule, and putting the filament in an atmosphere containing halogen salts will allow it to be pushed harder producing more lumens/watt and whiter light without blackening the envelope or blowing out prematurely. So called "quartz halogen" lamps have been around for a while. They actually put out enough UV radiation to warrant the use of a shield or outer bulb. If they suddenly shatter the hot shards of quartz can ignite surrounding materials as well.

Overdriving halogen lamps is quite hazardous and definitely should not be done on a regular basis.