Interior Lighting for Designers

(Elliott) #1

color temperature is often used to simulate
the color of standard incandescent lamps;
3000 K is compatible with tungsten-halogen
and linear, straight-tube 3000 K fluorescent
lamps; 3500 K and 4100 K are compatible
with straight-tube 3500 K and 4100 K fluo-
rescent lamps, respectively.
There are six families of compact fluo-
rescent lamps:



  1. T4 (½-in-diameter) twin-tube preheat
    lamps have starter devices in the two-pin
    plug base of the lamp. These lamps oper-
    ate on inexpensive reactor ballasts and
    are available from 5 W to 13 W (figure
    7.8).

  2. T4 or T5 (^58 -in-diameter)quad-tubepre-
    heat lamps have two-pin plug bases and
    integral starters; they are available from
    13 W to 26 W (figure 7.9). Some of these


lamps use reactor ballasts; others require
autotransformer/reactor ballasts. Designed
to be a more compact, higher lumen
output variation of the twin-tube kind, they
provide a substantial increase in light
output compared to twin-tube lamps.


  1. T4quad-tubeelectronic lamps are similar
    to the quad-tube preheat lamps, except
    that they have four-pin plug bases and no
    integral starters; they are available from
    13 W to 26 W (figure 7.9). Designed for
    operation with electronic rapid-start bal-
    lasts, they also operate on preheat cir-
    cuits. These lamps can be dimmed with an
    electronic dimming ballast.

  2. T4 triple-tube rapid-start/preheat lamps
    have four-pin plug bases without starters;
    they are available from 18 W to 70 W
    (figure 7.10). Designed to deliver high


DISCHARGE LAMPS

Figure 7.8Twin-tube compact fluo-
rescent lamp at one-half actual
size.


Figure 7.9 Quad-tube compact
fluorescent lamp at one-half actual
size.

Figure 7.10Triple-tube compact
fluorescent lamp at one-half actual
size.
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