B&H
Well-known member
I own an auto repair shop. Last fall, I built another building, had my electrician run power from the original building, install 100amp service, and install new T8 light fixtures w/o ballasts and LED tubes that I sourced online. Whenever we are using a high-draw electrical item, such as a 110v MIG welder, 220v lift, or 220v air compressor in the original building, the lights flicker annoyingly in the new building.
I had the electrician back 3 times, no problem found on his end. If we look at the LED tubes in the original building when operating the same equipment, there is a barely noticeable flicker. If we use the one high-draw item in the new building that we currently have there (220v lift), the new LED tubes flicker the same as using any of the aforementioned items in the original building.
In the original building, most of the overhead lighting is Phillips Instant Fit T8 bulbs with the ballasts still in place in the fixtures. The one exception are T12 fixtures that I removed the ballasts from and installed T12 LED tubes with internal drivers. Again, none of the original building LED overhead lighting flickers much at all, certainly no where near the annoying flickering in the new building.
So I removed one T8 fixture w/ ballast w/ the Instant Fit bulbs from the original building and installed it in the new building, and had someone weld in the original building. The result was barely any flickering, just like in the original building.
I've discussed this with the bulb and fixture supplier - they've never heard of this, claimed they've sold 100,000,000,000,000,000,000 of these bulbs w/o any issue, and I'm the only one complaining..
So to their credit, they credited me the 48 tubes back, and now I'm trying to figure out a solution w/o having to wire in ballasts and install a "known-quantity" in the Phillips Instant Fit bulbs.
Does anyone have any ideas?
Another thing I don't like about the current bulbs in the new building is they don't seem as bright as the Phillips Instant fit ones in the old building, yet they are the same "frosted" style, same ceiling height, similar fixture to, and same paint job as the original building (white). I don't know if I should be comparing other specs on the bulbs other than the 4000k that they are.
I had the electrician back 3 times, no problem found on his end. If we look at the LED tubes in the original building when operating the same equipment, there is a barely noticeable flicker. If we use the one high-draw item in the new building that we currently have there (220v lift), the new LED tubes flicker the same as using any of the aforementioned items in the original building.
In the original building, most of the overhead lighting is Phillips Instant Fit T8 bulbs with the ballasts still in place in the fixtures. The one exception are T12 fixtures that I removed the ballasts from and installed T12 LED tubes with internal drivers. Again, none of the original building LED overhead lighting flickers much at all, certainly no where near the annoying flickering in the new building.
So I removed one T8 fixture w/ ballast w/ the Instant Fit bulbs from the original building and installed it in the new building, and had someone weld in the original building. The result was barely any flickering, just like in the original building.
I've discussed this with the bulb and fixture supplier - they've never heard of this, claimed they've sold 100,000,000,000,000,000,000 of these bulbs w/o any issue, and I'm the only one complaining..
So to their credit, they credited me the 48 tubes back, and now I'm trying to figure out a solution w/o having to wire in ballasts and install a "known-quantity" in the Phillips Instant Fit bulbs.
Does anyone have any ideas?
Another thing I don't like about the current bulbs in the new building is they don't seem as bright as the Phillips Instant fit ones in the old building, yet they are the same "frosted" style, same ceiling height, similar fixture to, and same paint job as the original building (white). I don't know if I should be comparing other specs on the bulbs other than the 4000k that they are.
