karr
Well-Known Member
OK most of us know that the CMH technology looks promising. Slight loss in lumens for an upgraded par. One of the major downfalls is the lack of CMH bulbs above 400w. The other downfall is the fact that digital ballasts do not work with these bulbs(with a few exceptions for low freq. units).
I will cut to the chase. Would it be possible/safe to take a 600w magnetic (cmh comparable) ballast. and simply wire in two sockets? In each socket would be a 400w CMH bulb ran at 300 watts. This could also be possible with the CMH compatable dimmable ballasts in situations like 750/2 =375 w each.
So the reasons this may not work(in my head).
It just wont, someone may know the electrical reason why.(though i see a specific output of 600w weather its split or not)
If one bulb fires before the other then the first bulb may get the full 600w and blow. Again i see both sparking near the same time and watts split evenly.
One realistic drawback; if one bulb were to fail(burn out) then all the power is sent to the one live bulb. Im not sure if that bulb would then burn out or if it would blow up. but either way its a consideration.
I imagine some form of wiring could be done to limit the max watts to each socket, im not sure about this.
In basic theory, could this work? It may be nice for one who has a nice 600w ballast and wants to experiment with some CMH bulbs.
Last question, if the above is possible would you run 1 cmh 1 hps or 2 cmh.
Thanks for stopping in. Rep for serious answers
I will cut to the chase. Would it be possible/safe to take a 600w magnetic (cmh comparable) ballast. and simply wire in two sockets? In each socket would be a 400w CMH bulb ran at 300 watts. This could also be possible with the CMH compatable dimmable ballasts in situations like 750/2 =375 w each.
So the reasons this may not work(in my head).
It just wont, someone may know the electrical reason why.(though i see a specific output of 600w weather its split or not)
If one bulb fires before the other then the first bulb may get the full 600w and blow. Again i see both sparking near the same time and watts split evenly.
One realistic drawback; if one bulb were to fail(burn out) then all the power is sent to the one live bulb. Im not sure if that bulb would then burn out or if it would blow up. but either way its a consideration.
I imagine some form of wiring could be done to limit the max watts to each socket, im not sure about this.
In basic theory, could this work? It may be nice for one who has a nice 600w ballast and wants to experiment with some CMH bulbs.
Last question, if the above is possible would you run 1 cmh 1 hps or 2 cmh.
Thanks for stopping in. Rep for serious answers