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Posted By: triple multi-volt ballasts - 12/02/11 02:08 AM
Are there any 120-277 volt ballasts that become "locked-in" (whether by design or by fault) to a certain voltage once used?
Posted By: HotLine1 Re: multi-volt ballasts - 12/05/11 03:20 AM
Triple:

Over the years, my service guys changed an awful lot of ballasts, but I can't say that I heard of any that locked into a voltage.

I know of some that went to the graveyard before their time, and some that met their demise by having 277 applied in lieu of 120!

I asked a service sparky Friday at a office bldg, he never tried to check if any would work on one voltage and not the other.

Anybody have any input??
Posted By: harold endean Re: multi-volt ballasts - 12/05/11 02:31 PM
John,


The only multi voltage ballasts I have seen are usually multi-tapped. It has been awhile since I was out in the fields with the tools. They might have something new that I don't know about. I am heading to my supply house this afternoon and I can check in with them.
Posted By: HotLine1 Re: multi-volt ballasts - 12/05/11 03:17 PM
Harold:

There have been, and probably still are electronic ballasts for T8 lamps that are multi voltage input. I remember 120/277 with single input (hot-neutral) factory conductors, and the internal ballast components sensed the input voltage.

I also remember (with 'new' electronic ballasts) not reading the label, and putting 277 to the 120 volt only ones! No disaster, only the ominous click, not even a puff of smoke.

The OP is wondering IF say you put 277 into a ballast, could you still use it for 120, or is it 'locked' into looking for 277?
Posted By: hbiss Re: multi-volt ballasts - 12/13/11 07:22 AM
I have only heard it mentioned. Never saw one myself.

-Hal
Posted By: Meadow Re: multi-volt ballasts - 12/14/11 12:39 AM
Ive taken smart volt ballasts that ran at 277 for sometime and put them in 120 volt fixtures without issues.

I see no reason why any one ballast would become locked in nor do I think it would hurt to try. As long as its within range of the label it will be fine
Posted By: HotLine1 Re: multi-volt ballasts - 12/14/11 02:04 AM
Gardner:

Hey, thanks for the input on this. And, if noone said it to you yet....Welcome to ECN Forums!!

Jump right in anytime.

Posted By: Vindiceptor Re: multi-volt ballasts - 12/14/11 02:29 AM
Years ago, remember we've been using the electronic fluorescent ballasts out here for nearly 3 decades now, the multi-volt ballasts were said to have a sacrificial 'jumper' that burned out depending on the first voltage is was connected to.

That made it unusable for any other voltage after.

That was then and today it's not the case (from what I've seen and read), but there's a LOT of sparky's out there that still go by that belief. Our own warehouse has hundreds of electronic ballasts in bins labeled as good for only one voltage, how many actually are is for someone else to determine.
Posted By: KJay Re: multi-volt ballasts - 12/15/11 04:42 PM
I also recall hearing something about this issue on multi-volt ballasts back in the early 1990’s, but I never was able to confirm it myself.
I do seem to remember that some older Grasslin DT series multi-volt defrost timers I installed on walk-in freezers had what they called automatic voltage adjustment. They would work on 120/208/240. You just hooked them up and they would “burn in” at whatever supply voltage they were connected to.
They must have done away with that feature, because the last ones I saw had the little DIP switches on the board that you manually set for the required voltage.
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