eeinpa
Electrical
- Nov 12, 2006
- 65
Greetings
My employer has buildings with Lithonia 400W metal halide lowbay lights connected in banks on 240V 3ph. While the nameplates say current at 240V is 2.0A, we seem to see more than that... enough that breakers are sometimes tripping even when (by calculation) loaded at no more than the NEC 80% permitted for continuous operation.
Any opinions on whether the current specs on these ballasts accurate and applicable over reasonable ranges of temperature, lamp age, etc.? We actually seem to be having more troubles in cold weather (our buildings are not particularly warm this time of year) than in hot.
What's the HID load look like? Does it have a high peak current which may cause excessive IR heating, and if so, why don't the lighting companies mention that anywhere?
Thank you for any useful suggestions!
My employer has buildings with Lithonia 400W metal halide lowbay lights connected in banks on 240V 3ph. While the nameplates say current at 240V is 2.0A, we seem to see more than that... enough that breakers are sometimes tripping even when (by calculation) loaded at no more than the NEC 80% permitted for continuous operation.
Any opinions on whether the current specs on these ballasts accurate and applicable over reasonable ranges of temperature, lamp age, etc.? We actually seem to be having more troubles in cold weather (our buildings are not particularly warm this time of year) than in hot.
What's the HID load look like? Does it have a high peak current which may cause excessive IR heating, and if so, why don't the lighting companies mention that anywhere?
Thank you for any useful suggestions!