Pactivist
Active member
I came very close to a house fire this weekend, I am telling you all right now that electricity is nothing to take lightly. I had two 400w HPS lights plugged into the timer and power strip in the photos that follow. the timer was rated at 1200w, 10amp, at 120 volts; the power strip was rated at 1800w, 15amp, at 120 volts. The lights are rated at 400w, 3.33amp, at 120 volts. I assume that having both lights attached to one timer was too much for it causing the meltdown that you see, even though it had been working fine for some time (about 6 months). Inrush current is usually higher than operating current, however there seems to be little data about inrush current on HID lights,at least accurate data. anyone have an idea what the rate of inrush is on an HID (150% of operating, maybe 200%) until I get this all figured out I have seperated the lights to individual timers, and am planning to build a contactor relay which will be hard wired to my house panel to prevent future timer meltdowns.
All in all I'd say I was very lucky to be standing there when this happened, and this incident totally justifies the smoke detectors, and (2)fire extinguishers located mere inches from the ballasts. Be safe - be careful - and check your timers regularly.
peAce,
pacT
All in all I'd say I was very lucky to be standing there when this happened, and this incident totally justifies the smoke detectors, and (2)fire extinguishers located mere inches from the ballasts. Be safe - be careful - and check your timers regularly.
peAce,
pacT