CFLs are blinking.

britownusa

Active Member
ok i just got some compact flourescent light fixtures with some light bulbs that i thought were great. well i screwed them in and they started blinking. i want to know which one of these problems it may be.

1. my light fixtures say 120v 60hz and my bulbs say 277v and 60hz.

2. i have too little power running to the lights

3. i have some kind of complicated problem where you are going to mention foreign things that i have never heard of
 

hellbelly

Active Member
Some pics of or more info about your socket and bulbs. I believe (I could be wrong) from a very quick google search that the higher voltage lights require a ballast and shouldn't even fit in a standard screw-type 120v socket.
 

GidgetGrows

Well-Known Member
Define blinking...

I had a CFL bulb that when I screwed it in it kinda pulsed with a plasma looking effect. I assumed it was just a bad bulb as the rest worked just fine.
 

Mr.Luso

Well-Known Member
if they are normal cfl you probably have the wires lose in there check that first and most lamps run on 220 or 230 volts thats the normal house voltages. but with those specs for the light i think hellbelly is right they prob need a ballast.
 

GrowingfortheGold

New Member
I'm a maintenence man currently and in one of the units this guy with AIDS died. He had some grow equipment in there. I took it and he had a bunch of t5's. I took one and when I put all the flourescents in I could only get half the bulbs lit. I took it all apart and it was a bad ballast. I didn't want to buy a new ballast to replace it cause I was just going to sell the fucker.

Random, Anyways...

What's the wattage on these CFL's. I can't plug a 100+ watt CFL into any mogul sockets I have since they're not rated for it. If I did it might do the same thing your talking about.
 

lilmcg49

Member
Give it a minute and see because the cfls need to warm up and sometimes when they are brand new they do infact flicker but soon are fine
 

IceWaterBong87

Well-Known Member
its like taking bulbs(cfls) cheap big tvs overseas n they run a different wattage it wont work
either u get matching wattages or u get a converterfor an actual lamp if u have special lamps (fixtures)

but for bulb n fixtures9screw in) it has to be right

one more thing
if u leave it running for long periods of time it may cause a short out/black out (whole area like a living room or kitchen or what ever your outlet is mainly connected to) u can just go to ur house breaker (usually located in the basement) n turn it back on but i wouldnt recommend doing that over n over just cuz u wont get a matching bulb with fixture
 

hellbelly

Active Member
if they are normal cfl you probably have the wires lose in there check that first and most lamps run on 220 or 230 volts thats the normal house voltages. but with those specs for the light i think hellbelly is right they prob need a ballast.
In the US normal house (what you plug tvs, lamps etc. into) voltage is 110-120 volts 60 Hz. We have 220-240, but that's for large appliances, not cfls. The UK uses 220 volts.
 

Mr.Luso

Well-Known Member
In the US normal house (what you plug tvs, lamps etc. into) voltage is 110-120 volts 60 Hz. We have 220-240, but that's for large appliances, not cfls. The UK uses 220 volts.
sorry my mistake i dint checked the normal voltages you guys use i just suppose it was the same as us in Europe we use 220-230 volts.
 

britownusa

Active Member
i thought that was it. i just wanted to make sure that they shouln't still work even with different voltages
 
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