PassnThru
Well-known member
So I had an electronic ballast fail in one of my garage lights last week. Bought a new one and installed it this week. Tonight I was cleaning up a little and decided that I should probably cut the wires off and save them. Could come in handy some day. Then I noticed how easy it would be to take the cover off. So I did. I didn't look before because I figured there was no way I could fix it. And I still can't - but at least I think I now know why it quit.
Here's a pic:
View media item 4823To line things up - the part on the right is the cover. The part in the middle is an apparent insulator that goes under the cover. To put the insulator in the correct position on the cover just imagine picking it up and moving it to the right and setting it down.
The ballast is on the left. To fit the cover on the ballast you would pick it up and rotate it 180 degrees to the left and place it down.
Here is a little bit of a close up of the affected area:
View media item 4824As you can see, they filled the ballast with a compound that hardens to supposedly prevent it from grounding out against the cover. In this pic, you can see where there is a piece of plastic missing from the insulator (middle in the pic) layer. You can also see that exact piece stuck to the outer casing. And you can also see some bare wiring on the ballast itself. Also, there is a small circle on the outer cover on the outside where part of the label stuck when I peeled it off.
In this particular case, it wasn't a matter of if the ballast would fail but when.
I'm certainly not an electrical engineer but that's what it looks like to me.
Here's a pic:
View media item 4823To line things up - the part on the right is the cover. The part in the middle is an apparent insulator that goes under the cover. To put the insulator in the correct position on the cover just imagine picking it up and moving it to the right and setting it down.
The ballast is on the left. To fit the cover on the ballast you would pick it up and rotate it 180 degrees to the left and place it down.
Here is a little bit of a close up of the affected area:
View media item 4824As you can see, they filled the ballast with a compound that hardens to supposedly prevent it from grounding out against the cover. In this pic, you can see where there is a piece of plastic missing from the insulator (middle in the pic) layer. You can also see that exact piece stuck to the outer casing. And you can also see some bare wiring on the ballast itself. Also, there is a small circle on the outer cover on the outside where part of the label stuck when I peeled it off.
In this particular case, it wasn't a matter of if the ballast would fail but when.
I'm certainly not an electrical engineer but that's what it looks like to me.