because DC can't get through a capacitor
Yes, that's what I was wondering - just remembering my schoolboy electronics from a VERY long time ago... and that's about as far as it goes...
because DC can't get through a capacitor
Hmmm. I don't know about 'rated', but I seriously doubt that you'd be able to find a bridge rectifier which would not work happily and satisfactorily at a few dozen kHz, probably an awful lot higher.They have a bridge rectifier for a start which is probably not rated at the frequency.'t
If "overheat" means heat production, is this some sort of new physics? If the amount of light and heat being produced are the same, where is the additional 50% of energy usage going?I have experimented with these lamps at 40kHz and they consume 1 1/2 times the power for the same brightness and overheat.
What's its frequency response?I used a plug in power meter. It plugs into the mains and has a socket for the load. It will measure voltage, current, power, VA, and power factor.
What's its frequency response?
Unless it's a clever/expensive one which looks at instantaneous voltage and and current very frequently and then integrates the vector VA product to get power, it will be assuming a perfect sine wave current, which I imagine is probably not the case with and SMPSI used a plug in power meter. It plugs into the mains and has a socket for the load. It will measure voltage, current, power, VA, and power factor.
Well, for a start, I thought you said that the 'heat' was the same. Whatever, how do you know that the heat is being dissipated in the lamps, rather than in the SMPS - did you perhaps measure the lamp temperature?It measures the input of the transformer or SMPS. WIth a 20 watt halogen lamp it reads 20 watts on both a transformer or SMPS. With 4 5 watt LEDs (so as to get the minimum SMPS load) it reads 20 watts on a transformer and 30 watts on the SMPS. ... The extra power dissipates as heat in the lamps.
I have, in the past, deconstructed some LED lamps, and cheap ones often just have the rectifier and a resistor (and often a pathetically small reservoir capacitor). I also suspect that 'dimmable' ones may be the same (regardless of price), since that is presumably the easiest way to facilitate dimming.I've not deconstructed one but I imagine they have a bridge rectifier and a small SMPS inside, not a simple dropper resistor.
It's true that the 'efficiency' of a bridge rectifier (indeed, any semiconductor diode rectifier) will decrease (i.e.'losses' will increase) with increasing frequency, so that if one wanted one to work at high frequencies, one would use fast-recovery (e.g. Shotkky) diodes. However, I have often used bog standard cheapo bridge rectifiers ('optimised' for 50-60Hz) at frequencies up to 100 kHz and beyond, with only modest losses, and would therefore not expect a lot in the way of losses at 40 kHz (or whatever). In any event, when there are losses, they result in additional heat being dissipated in the rectifier diodes, not in the load as you suggest (or is that perhaps what you meant when you said "in the lamp"?).If the bridge rectifier does not use switching diodes the switch off time will be too slow to operate efficiently at 40kHz.
But it is the case with the supply to the electronic transformer, which is what the meter is looking at.Unless it's a clever/expensive one which looks at instantaneous voltage and and current very frequently and then integrates the vector VA product to get power, it will be assuming a perfect sine wave current, which I imagine is probably not the case with and SMPS
Is it? I would have thought that the 'switching' undertaken in the early stages of an SMPS would result in the input current being far from a pure sine wave.But it is the case with the supply to the electronic transformer, which is what the meter is looking at.
Depends on the SMPS BAS. Some just chop the incoming supply and rectify the chopped waveform. Even the others will have a spiky current waveform, since current will only flow when the incoming voltage is greater than that in the smoothing capacitor.Doesn't the 230V AC input get rectified and smoothed, and then that is used to supply an oscillator?
In that case, it would presumably be pretty close. However, as stillp has said, I think that a true SMPS simply chops the supply (the clue is in the first 'S' of SMPS), which will certainly result in a supply current which is not a pure sine wave.Ah - I see what you mean. But it shouldn't happen like that? Doesn't the 230V AC input get rectified and smoothed, and then that is used to supply an oscillator? So the input current would be a sine wave?
In many cases nothing like one.So the input current would be a sine wave?
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