Does anyone know the functions of voltage for the tungsten halogen lamp?
The 1984 edition IESNA Lighting Handbook gives a graph and functions for
vacuum and gas filled type lamps.
I think the life function is considerably different because of the
halogen cycle.
As far as I have heard, the "one-size-fits-all" rule for non-halogen
incandescents is at least roughly:
Light output - proportional to voltage to the 3.4 or 3.5 power.
Keep in mind that this exponent varies a little inversely with ratio of
applied voltage to rated voltage.
As for halogen - I would say slightly lower, since higher filament
temperature makes this one lower.
How much lower? I would guess not much if rated life expectancy is at
least 2,000 hours - guesstimate 3.3. But lower than that, closer to 3
even for shorter life ones with color temperature above 3100K - many
automotive headlight bulbs and many stage/studio/photo/projector types.
Life expectancy - It appears to me that the "1-size-fits-all" rule is
inversely proportional to ratio of applied/rated voltage raised to the
12th power.
I would say halogen deviates greatly from non-halogen for undervoltage.
Life expectancy for halogen lamps I would guess mostly increases slightly
to moderately from slight to moderate undervoltage, and can do anything
from great improvement to major disimprovement with severe undervoltage
depending on brand, model, halogen type/concentration details and presence
of contaminants.
But for overvoltage, I would guess that a halogen lamp is more like a
non-halogen incandescent.
- Don Klipstein (
[email protected])