mx842
Well-known member
I got some new light fixtures that were too good to turn down but you know how that goes. Anyway they were supposed to be for 120V but after I had them all mounted and started to wire them in I found out they were 277V. I had spent a day and a half taking down old fixtures that I wanted to replace and adding new ones in places I needed more light.
I didn't want to scrap the whole bunch so I decided to just buy new ballast which I did. They had 3, 4' t 8 bulbs in them but there was enough room in them to add another bulb which I decided to do which wasn't a big deal to at least 4 of the fixtures. When
When I bought the ballast I got the ones that could be used in both 3 and 4 fixture's. I even bought a couple extras for spares because they were the same ballast that were in some of the other fixtures I already had in the shop. The problem is that I have wired these things 20 different ways to sunday and they still wont work.
I called the place I got them from and thinking they might have a wiring diagram for the three tube setup since I couldn't get them to work with 4 tubes. The guy basically blew me off and told me to call an electrician that he couldn't tell me how to wire them. I then told him, well there is a wiring diagram on the ballast for the 4 tube wiring but I wanted to go the 3 tube route and he said we don't have a wiring diagram for the three tube setup. I then asked him if the ballast I bought could be used both ways and he said yes, yes they could........But he couldn't send me anything on how to wire it that way.
Long story short I'm still holding the bag and still can't figure out why they wont work. I'm now thinking the electrical connectors that are in the fixtures are the wrong type for the ballast I have. My question is should the connectors be shunted or non shunted connectors for the parallel wiring diagram that is displayed on the ballast?
Signed In the dark
I didn't want to scrap the whole bunch so I decided to just buy new ballast which I did. They had 3, 4' t 8 bulbs in them but there was enough room in them to add another bulb which I decided to do which wasn't a big deal to at least 4 of the fixtures. When
When I bought the ballast I got the ones that could be used in both 3 and 4 fixture's. I even bought a couple extras for spares because they were the same ballast that were in some of the other fixtures I already had in the shop. The problem is that I have wired these things 20 different ways to sunday and they still wont work.
I called the place I got them from and thinking they might have a wiring diagram for the three tube setup since I couldn't get them to work with 4 tubes. The guy basically blew me off and told me to call an electrician that he couldn't tell me how to wire them. I then told him, well there is a wiring diagram on the ballast for the 4 tube wiring but I wanted to go the 3 tube route and he said we don't have a wiring diagram for the three tube setup. I then asked him if the ballast I bought could be used both ways and he said yes, yes they could........But he couldn't send me anything on how to wire it that way.
Long story short I'm still holding the bag and still can't figure out why they wont work. I'm now thinking the electrical connectors that are in the fixtures are the wrong type for the ballast I have. My question is should the connectors be shunted or non shunted connectors for the parallel wiring diagram that is displayed on the ballast?
Signed In the dark

