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Main Boards => The Bowyer's Bench => Topic started by: Kirkll on November 06, 2022, 09:45:12 PM
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I need some help here guys.
I bought a couple of these low budget halogen puck lights for my spray booth to help keep it warm in there. I installed a couple 75 watt G-8 halgen bulbs in them, and they didn't last 3 hours before i had a serious melt down....
I mean.... It's a good thing i didn't leave them on over night , or i could have had a fire on my hands. These little 75 watt G-8 bulbs get HOT! And.... i'm ok with hot. It's why i bought them was for heat.
They have got to have metal , or ceramic shielded fixtures rated for 75-100 watt G-8 bulbs, but i cannot find them anywhere. Any ideas?
Weather is getting cold at night here. We had half snow , half rain today. I've been using 3 - 150 watt incandescent bulbs to heat my little spray booth, and thought i'd get changed over to halogen lights with the incandescent bulbs getting harder to find.
Kirk
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Screw the halogen. They get way too hot and they don't last. LED is what you want. I know they don't get hot, but halogen is not what you want. JF
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No…. Halogen is exactly what I want. LED is great for low cost lighting, I want a heat source as well as light.
I was hoping someone could point me in the right direction for finding a robust fixture that can handle the heat without melting. I guess I’ll have to contact a specialty lighting store. Kirk
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What about Floodlights?
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Kirk I think Bugs mentioned there are metal fixtures for puck lights.
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Kirk I think Bugs mentioned there are metal fixtures for puck lights.
I spent a bunch of time searching for fixtures that would take a 75-100 G-8 bulb, and couldn’t find anything at all. I mean….. they make the high watt bulbs….So there has to be fixtures that won’t melt down after 2 hours of use. :dunno:
I’m going to try contacting a commercial lighting company and see what they recommend. Kirk
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Good choice Kirk. All else fails. Contact the commercial people. We have to at work to find out what works and what's not going to work. JF
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Well i looked all over the place and couldn't find a fixture that would take the high watt G-8 halogen bulbs. but i did find some ceramic base units , and built my own light strip. I'm testing what kind of heat they are generating right now.
Here are the base units
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B071JXNZWK?tag=neseppe-20
Here is the fixture i built .
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I bought a couple of these low budget halogen puck lights for my spray booth to help keep it warm in there. I installed a couple 75 watt G-8 halgen bulbs in them, and they didn't last 3 hours before i had a serious melt down....
I mean.... It's a good thing i didn't leave them on over night , or i could have had a fire on my hands. These little 75 watt G-8 bulbs get HOT! And.... i'm ok with hot. It's why i bought them was for heat.
Not surprised! Those pucks usually have between 15-25w bulbs. 75w, even in a metal puck housing would get too hot. I guessing yours were plastic? Did you leave the lens on them?
I like the homemade fixture :thumbsup: Hope you are not using those G-8's while spraying, those pin connectors are not sealed from the atmosphere.
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I bought a couple of these low budget halogen puck lights for my spray booth to help keep it warm in there. I installed a couple 75 watt G-8 halgen bulbs in them, and they didn't last 3 hours before i had a serious melt down....
I mean.... It's a good thing i didn't leave them on over night , or i could have had a fire on my hands. These little 75 watt G-8 bulbs get HOT! And.... i'm ok with hot. It's why i bought them was for heat.
Not surprised! Those pucks usually have between 15-25w bulbs. 75w, even in a metal puck housing would get too hot. I guessing yours were plastic? Did you leave the lens on them?
I like the homemade fixture :thumbsup: Hope you are not using those G-8's while spraying, those pin connectors are not sealed from the atmosphere.
I never thought about that Buggs... You think there might be a fire danger risk spraying with those on?
I'll tell ya what..... 6 of these 75 watt G-8 bulbs put out a lot of heat. These could easily be used in a hot box bow oven.
I think i'm going to build a smaller version with 4 bulbs using sheet metal and ceramic tile to heat my boat in seriously cold weather. I've got it in a covered boat shed out of the weather, with a full canvas top and windshield. When it drops into the low 20's for a week at a time, like it does in February sometimes, i like to have some heat in that rig. I think this would work excellent. I'd Just set it on a piece of ceramic tile.
Kirk
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Not so much a fire, but an explosive fireball. Probably not a huge risk, especially if you have good exhaust, but with explosive fumes, I don't think any risk is worth taking.
I know you like anecdotes, so here are a couple. Years ago I was doing finish work on some cabinets on location, which was a garage turned spray booth. I hired a guy to help me move material. We would spray a batch with Laquer and after it flashed off, open the garage door to clear the fumes. One time after spraying, I hit the garage button and as the door is rising, the dude lights a cigarette while the room is still swirling, full of fumes. I literally dove under the door, expecting to be burnt to a crisp. Nothing happened, except helper dude was sent home.
What caused my panic was knowing a guy who was in a similar situation working in a basement when a carpenter open the door while smoking and ignited the fumes. My friend Paul was badly burnt and lasted about a week before he succumbed. The carpenter survived, but was also burnt bad and horribly scarred, physically and mentally.
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I had an old single bulb fixture hanging in my spray booth go up in flames not long ago. Fortunately i was not spraying at the time, but it scared me badly. I was about ready to run for the fire extinguisher , but it flamed out pretty quick. I had been using this fixture for many years, and why it decided to go up in flames is beyond me..... I had just turned it on, and it shot a 3" fireball out the side. :o :o :o if i'd have had it happen while spraying, id have been toast.
I do have a pretty good exhaust fan running while spraying. I rigged up a 6" squirrel cage with a 6" exhaust hose that was used for a down draft stove top unit. It definitely sucks.... In a good way. :biglaugh: I also keep the door open to let more fresh air in as the exhaust fan runs. My spray booth is tiny by professional standards.