I've looked around online for information on making your own magnetic ballasts but there's little in the way of information on it (or it's been flooded with convert to electronic advert rubbish).
Anyone know anything about it?
Making ballasts DIY
- lasagafield
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- Location: Salford
Making ballasts DIY
Gotta have me, a good... LASAGA!
- Slyspark
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Re: Making ballasts DIY
You'd probably he best speaking to Ash about this. I think he's probably the resident expert there.....
Bad choices make good stories!
- Kev
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Re: Making ballasts DIY
As far as I know ash is seriously looking in to this. Are you coming to the meet as I have invited ash and he is trying to make arrangements
- Ash
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- Joined: Sat Dec 02, 2017 9:42 pm
Re: Making ballasts DIY
I am looking into this myself, but i think not in the same way you (Lasagafield) want to. Here are your options :
1
Make them using parts for DIY transformer construction - E/I plates and bobbin
Advantage : The best quality ballast you can make (without special equipment)
Problem : Ballasts need an air gap of a determined size in the core. In transformers the design goal is opposite, to eliminate the gaps as much as possible. The laminations (steel plates for the core) made for transformers are specifically designed for the latter. There are ones designed for devices with a gap, but are not as widely available
2
Make them in the "big gap open core" design (cheap crude FL chokes from the 60s/70s)
Advantage : Very basic design, simple, forgiving to bad precision, probably forgiving to bad quality steel
Disadvantages : Not precise (lamp current may be off the mark), very leaky magnetically (so tend to be buzzy)
The design/calculation theory is straightforward, but still, i guess we gotta be prepared to waste some copper wire and possibly blow a tube or two in the first attempts
There indeed is no material about ballasts, but there is about transformers, so that should give you a start
Here is one : https://ludens.cl/Electron/trafos/trafos.html
Check out the stuff and think what you actually want
1
Make them using parts for DIY transformer construction - E/I plates and bobbin
Advantage : The best quality ballast you can make (without special equipment)
Problem : Ballasts need an air gap of a determined size in the core. In transformers the design goal is opposite, to eliminate the gaps as much as possible. The laminations (steel plates for the core) made for transformers are specifically designed for the latter. There are ones designed for devices with a gap, but are not as widely available
2
Make them in the "big gap open core" design (cheap crude FL chokes from the 60s/70s)
Advantage : Very basic design, simple, forgiving to bad precision, probably forgiving to bad quality steel
Disadvantages : Not precise (lamp current may be off the mark), very leaky magnetically (so tend to be buzzy)
The design/calculation theory is straightforward, but still, i guess we gotta be prepared to waste some copper wire and possibly blow a tube or two in the first attempts
There indeed is no material about ballasts, but there is about transformers, so that should give you a start
Here is one : https://ludens.cl/Electron/trafos/trafos.html
Check out the stuff and think what you actually want
- lasagafield
- Posts: 216
- Joined: Fri Jun 01, 2018 11:06 pm
- Location: Salford
Re: Making ballasts DIY
Afraid not.As far as I know ash is seriously looking in to this. Are you coming to the meet as I have invited ash and he is trying to make arrangements
Don't drive so everywhere I go's local.
I am hoping to get a car next year so if plans don't fall through.
Ash that's a fantastic find.
Thank you for that.
Gotta have me, a good... LASAGA!
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