MTFEA
Electrical
- Mar 20, 2009
- 1
An installation of LED lamps in refrigerated space (inside reach-in glass doors on grocery cooler) has seen high failure rate of LED lamp drivers (AC to DC). LED lamps are powered by a branch on the same phase (but separate branch circuit) as anti-sweat door heaters totalling 30A. Separate installation of controlls on door heater circuits have solid state relays opening and closing the 30A door heater circuits on a frequency of about 1HZ.
Could the voltage spike associated with each OFF cycle of the door heater circuits be causing the LED drivers to fail even though they are on a different branch circuit? e.g. the voltage spike would have to be traveling through the service panel and out the LED light branch to reach the drivers. It is a small store with not a lot on the panels (not a lot of other systems to damp out the voltage spike).
Could the voltage spike associated with each OFF cycle of the door heater circuits be causing the LED drivers to fail even though they are on a different branch circuit? e.g. the voltage spike would have to be traveling through the service panel and out the LED light branch to reach the drivers. It is a small store with not a lot on the panels (not a lot of other systems to damp out the voltage spike).