GEC Linear Sodium SLI/H 60W
The regular version of GEC's 60W SLI/H, about a minute after starting.  I've never seen such an intense blue as this around the electrodes in an LPS lamp, now I am quite curious to measure it tomorrow and find out what gas filling GEC was using in its later SLI lamps.

GEC Linear Sodium SLI/H 60W

The regular version of GEC's 60W SLI/H, about a minute after starting. I've never seen such an intense blue as this around the electrodes in an LPS lamp, now I am quite curious to measure it tomorrow and find out what gas filling GEC was using in its later SLI lamps.

IMG_8225.JPG IMG_4168.JPG D_SLP_GEC_SLI60_lit.JPG IMG_4150.JPG Bell_Opalux_Tubular.JPG
File information
Filename:D_SLP_GEC_SLI60_lit.JPG
Album name:James / James
Filesize:2239 KiB
Date added:25 Aug, 2015
Dimensions:3189 x 2048 pixels
Displayed:67 times
URL:http://80.229.24.59:9232/gallery/displayimage.php?pid=463
Favourites:Add to Favourites

Comment 1 to 15 of 15
Page: 1

lampy   [25 Aug, 2015 at 06:49 PM]
great clear photographs, work of art seeing these lit
AngryHorse   [25 Aug, 2015 at 07:00 PM]
Thats unusual for any low pressure sodium lamp, I`ve seen cathode flare, but this only lasts a few seconds, but never seen this.
James   [25 Aug, 2015 at 07:03 PM]
This lasted right until the middle of the lamp had completely run up, but gradually drowned out by the sodium radiation. Tomorrow I will take into work and measure the chemical composition of the gas discharge to see what's there. Maybe you are right about it coming from the cathode, perhaps it was contaminated with something.
RobTDCI   [25 Aug, 2015 at 07:15 PM]
Amazing pic!
Danny   [25 Aug, 2015 at 07:18 PM]
Another wonderful pic. Beautiful lamps
Andy   [25 Aug, 2015 at 08:53 PM]
What a gorgeous photo! I do love watching my SLI/H lamps warm up. Not yet found a GEC 60w or 140w version.
Kev   [25 Aug, 2015 at 09:00 PM]
Mgod amazing picture I want to play with my SLI/H lamps now
thorncollector   [16 Sep, 2015 at 09:11 PM]
is it a new lamp thats probably carbon dioxide the same thing that happens such as the blue flare from new sox lamps. i once had a osram 135w that had blue halfway up one side of the dt on startup
XmasLightGuy   [18 Sep, 2015 at 02:47 AM]
Awesome pic! This could be hung on a wall as art!
I'd love to find one of those SLI/H lamps
James   [21 Sep, 2015 at 11:43 PM]
Thanks! I have it on my desktop at work Smile I think you are right John, I took it to work to measure the gas emission spectrum and it didn't do it again. I was surprised to find that there is virtually no neon in the GEC SLI's, they are filled with argon and xenon!
Kev   [22 Sep, 2015 at 12:10 AM]
How on earth do you measure such things James surely you have to puncture the lamp?
XmasLightGuy   [22 Sep, 2015 at 02:59 AM]
@Kev: I would assume he has a spectrometer or something like that 'reads' the spectrum it puts out when on?
FrontSideBus   [27 Dec, 2015 at 04:00 PM]
Probably some sort of diffraction grating.
Slyspark   [27 Apr, 2016 at 08:10 PM]
SLI/H lamps are always a joy to watch warm up, especially the GEC version!
James   [29 Apr, 2016 at 11:05 PM]
Right, we have a spectrometer with a small optical fibre cable which you can point at certain regions of the discharge to analyse the colours of the ionised filling. It's used together with some software we wrote that detects the wavelength of each spectral line, then looks it up in a database of the elements, and you can instantly see which elements are inside. Very useful for inspecting competitors lamps without destroying them, years ago at the lighting exhibitions it was not unusual to find lamp engineers walking around with pocket spectrometers and trying to discretely aim them at some new HID lamp on show and find out the chemical filling before they were launched for sale Wink There also used to be a great hotel in Eindhoven directly opposite the Philips labs - and more than a few times engineers from competitors were known to book a room there, take with them a good telescope and a spectrometer, and point it through the windows of the labs to find out what new elements Philips was researching in its lamps! No more fun these days with LED, the technology is all too often the same and far too simple, or at the microscopic level and you can't investigate anything outside the labs.

Comment 1 to 15 of 15
Page: 1

Add your comment
Anonymous comments are not allowed here. Log in to post your comment