Replacing power supply for halogen bulb

no enough 2b dangerous

Sep 8, 2015
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Sep 8, 2015
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Looking for advice on powering halogen bulb.
Used on microscope.
24V 150 Watt bulb. Also powers the cooling fan 12 VDC.
Have several microscopes which use a 110 V AC - 24 VDC power supply.
Unable to get repair parts. No part marking on power supply except BC-150.
Purchased power supply ECP150PS24, XP power product.
Plugged it in and voila - worked great for light and fan. over a year in service and no problems.
A different unit died eight months later.
Tried to get same supply. Not available.
Purchased MPB150-2024, Power-One product.
This one appears to pulse current and then stop, pulse, stop, etc.
The bulb pulses orange glow for just a tenth of a second then out.
Manufacturer says it is protecting from short circuit - doing what it is supposed to do.
They had no recommendation for another of their supply or how to make this one work.
Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.
 

Minder

Apr 24, 2015
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I suspect your power one supply is SMPS and due to the high inrush of a Halogen lamp (current x14) it shuts it down.
Unless the fan is DC you can operate on a simple 120v/24v transformer if you require DC then just place a bridge rectifier on the output, you will need to size the components for the lamp current x 15 - x 20 to cover the inrush.
A linear supply like this is far more rugged.
M.
 

Bluejets

Oct 5, 2014
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When installing dichoric lamps (similar to halogen) in hospitals where Clipsal Cbus was present, we would use a type of inrush filter per x amount of lamps.
Extended their running life ten fold.
Cannot find a link to them at present though.
They were housed in a standard Clipsal electrical J-box approx 70 x 50 x 50 mm high.
 

duke37

Jan 9, 2011
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If you want to make something yourself, you could put a resistor or another bulb in series for a couple of seconds to reduce the inrush. This is often known as soft start.

Could the faulty supplies be mended?
 
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