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- From: whit@carson.u.washington.edu (John Whitmore)
- Newsgroups: sci.electronics
- Subject: Re: RFI free dimmer switches...
- Date: 29 Dec 1992 23:47:33 GMT
- Organization: University of Washington, Seattle
- Lines: 45
- Distribution: na
- Message-ID: <1hqo2lINNhr0@shelley.u.washington.edu>
- References: <72415@cup.portal.com> <1992Dec26.063254.23524@murdoch.acc.Virginia.EDU> <1992Dec27.051620.22808@ee.ubc.ca>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: carson.u.washington.edu
-
- In article <1992Dec27.051620.22808@ee.ubc.ca> jmorriso@ee.ubc.ca (John Paul Morrison) writes:
- >In article <1992Dec26.063254.23524@murdoch.acc.Virginia.EDU> alexander@kronos.pharm.Virginia.EDU (Robert Alexander) writes:
- >>In article <72415@cup.portal.com> dbell@cup.portal.com (David J Bell) writes:
- >>>
- >>>>But a light dimmer I have installed makes the lightbulb RING alot, and
- >>>>it's very annoying. The ringing gets worse when you dim the light. I'm
- >>>>wondering if a "RFI free" dimmer will reduce this ringing.
-
-
- >At 120 V 60 Hz, the bulb doesn't make any noise. But with the dimmer
- >(triac + stuff), it does ring, and not at 60Hz (which wouldn't be bad)
- >but it rings around 2-3 kHz, which is ANNOYING (since hearing is very acute
- >around there).
-
- Either you have to have enough filter components (inductors
- or capacitors) to filter higher frequencies than 60 Hz, or you
- have to have a light bulb thatoesn't acoustically respond to
- the various frequencies generated by the dimmer.
-
- One can presumably operate 12V halogen lamps on regulated
- 12V switching power supplies (most of which are adjustable, and
- therefore allow dimming). Going the build-it-yourself route is
- expensive and not recommended for power circuitry, unless it
- can't be bought.
-
- Or, one can use a dimmer circuit that doesn't generate
- any harmonics; I refer, of course, to a variable autotransformer
- (VARIAC or similar brand).
-
- It is possible to make regulated high-frequency AC with a
- switching resonant converter, but (aside from some microwave ovens)
- this kind of circuit is not commercially available in suitable
- form for running incandescent bulbs. I have run lamps with
- a microwave oven (works best on neon and low-pressure gas lamps),
- but this sems not entirely practical...
-
- Almost all dimming circuits use the simple SCR or TRIAC
- switching scheme that generates significant acoustic-frequency
- 'buzz', and any coiled-filament bulb will convert some of this
- energy to audible sound. Perhaps trying different kinds
- of bulb and selecting for least whine is the easiest route to take.
-
- John Whitmore
-
-
-