P
Peskiwabit
I hope someone here can help me sort out why I keep blowing my ceiling lights because the company I bought the lamps from are no help what so ever, they just cost me more money!
About 4 months ago I converted my kitchen lighting from a single 100w 240v tungston bulb to four 3.3w 12v MR16 LED downlights for energy saving reasons. What a mistake it's turning out to be because 2 months ago 3 led's failed, starting with flicker until its death.
So, I contacted the company I bought them from and explained my problem, I also asked if they have had many of these led's returned faulty.
Keeping the telephone conversation short; They said that my driver was too powerful for their lamps (I didn't understand this then and still don't undurstand it now) and I would be better to use 2 of their own brand 12w drivers in place of the one 16w Aurora I was using. Also, they said they had 9 led's in total returned faulty and they sell a lot of these.
I ended up agreeing to purchase 2 of their drivers plus spare led's while I returned the faulty ones... (these ended up being lost in the post. :sigh: ).
Right, the new drivers were installed and running until a month later (yesterday) another led has failed. Today I called the company and was now told my cabling was too thick. Well after a while listening to him talking and getting me nowhere I hung up and started writing this post.
Details of what I used for the conversion:
1st conversion
Existing wiring from the ceiling rose terminated in a junction box and power to the driver from the existing light switch.
0.75mm 2 Core Flex, Current Capacity 6a from driver to led's.
4x 12v 3.3w MR16 led's connected in parallel (use constant voltage only).
1x Aurora 12v 16w DC Constant Voltage LED Driver (AU-LED16T).
Airspace above the kitchen is the roof space.
2nd conversion
Same as above except:
2x company branded 12v 12w constant voltage drivers (each driver powering 2 led's in parallel).
I hope this post isn't confusing, I'm not sure what to do other than go back to what works and apologise to the environment for trying.
About 4 months ago I converted my kitchen lighting from a single 100w 240v tungston bulb to four 3.3w 12v MR16 LED downlights for energy saving reasons. What a mistake it's turning out to be because 2 months ago 3 led's failed, starting with flicker until its death.
So, I contacted the company I bought them from and explained my problem, I also asked if they have had many of these led's returned faulty.
Keeping the telephone conversation short; They said that my driver was too powerful for their lamps (I didn't understand this then and still don't undurstand it now) and I would be better to use 2 of their own brand 12w drivers in place of the one 16w Aurora I was using. Also, they said they had 9 led's in total returned faulty and they sell a lot of these.
I ended up agreeing to purchase 2 of their drivers plus spare led's while I returned the faulty ones... (these ended up being lost in the post. :sigh: ).
Right, the new drivers were installed and running until a month later (yesterday) another led has failed. Today I called the company and was now told my cabling was too thick. Well after a while listening to him talking and getting me nowhere I hung up and started writing this post.
Details of what I used for the conversion:
1st conversion
Existing wiring from the ceiling rose terminated in a junction box and power to the driver from the existing light switch.
0.75mm 2 Core Flex, Current Capacity 6a from driver to led's.
4x 12v 3.3w MR16 led's connected in parallel (use constant voltage only).
1x Aurora 12v 16w DC Constant Voltage LED Driver (AU-LED16T).
Airspace above the kitchen is the roof space.
2nd conversion
Same as above except:
2x company branded 12v 12w constant voltage drivers (each driver powering 2 led's in parallel).
I hope this post isn't confusing, I'm not sure what to do other than go back to what works and apologise to the environment for trying.