I'm trying to replace 4 inset downlights with surface mounted ones: Phoebe LED, Atlanta Universal Downlight 6.5W/3000K, chosen as they'll fill/cover the now hard-to-find 100mm diameter cut-outs the previous lamps used.
I wired one in, attaching the cables to the junction box the transformer the older light had been connected to and all seemed good. I moved to the next, wired that in, tried that and it flickered before going off. I switched off and on again at the wall just to double-check, and the first previously working light did the same: a quick flicker then dead.
Nothing tripped and the circuit is good with the other two old downlights that operate from the same wall switch still functioning.
I took a look inside one of the dead units and I think at least one of the LEDs is burned out. This got me thinking: While being given a sales pitch from a solar company we were shown how our voltage was high, fluctuating around the 250v mark. Assuming that is the case, would such a relatively small overvoltage cause an LED to fail near-immediately?
Thanks in advance for any thoughts you might have, and for any solutions you could offer up. I'm reluctant to try the other units for fear of killing them too.
I wired one in, attaching the cables to the junction box the transformer the older light had been connected to and all seemed good. I moved to the next, wired that in, tried that and it flickered before going off. I switched off and on again at the wall just to double-check, and the first previously working light did the same: a quick flicker then dead.
Nothing tripped and the circuit is good with the other two old downlights that operate from the same wall switch still functioning.
I took a look inside one of the dead units and I think at least one of the LEDs is burned out. This got me thinking: While being given a sales pitch from a solar company we were shown how our voltage was high, fluctuating around the 250v mark. Assuming that is the case, would such a relatively small overvoltage cause an LED to fail near-immediately?
Thanks in advance for any thoughts you might have, and for any solutions you could offer up. I'm reluctant to try the other units for fear of killing them too.
- TL;DR
- Would ~250v kill a 240v LED?