T
treez
Guest
Hello,
We have installed one hundred 25W outdoor LED lamps in a town in Bosnia. Sixty failed in just a few weeks. :-(
They all are fed from a single 240VAC generator which delivers power to the 2500 metres of mains cable. A contactor near the generator is used to switch them all on/off. The lamps are fitted every 25 metres along this cable. The cable is overhead (not buried). It’s aluminium cable. Its twisted, though the installers tell us that in places the twisting is “not so tight”. We suspect there is an awful lot of mains stray wiring inductance.
The strange thing is that they have another run of one hundred of the exact same lamps, but in this case the 2500 metre mains cable is buried in the ground. –None of these lamps with the buried cable have failed despite being installed months ago.
The lamps are controlled by microcontrollers in them which slowly dim the lamps as the night goes past the small hours, so as to save energy when few people are really outside.
We suspect that maybe there is some kind of transmission line effect going on, with the long mains cable. We have advised the installers to fit an RC snubber across the contactor, and another across Live/neutral, just downstream of the contactor. We also wonder that with the “not so tightly twisted” mains cable, maybe noise is getting into the long overhead mains cable, and disrupting the microcontroller.
The lamps are not SMPS based, but instead are sucessively switched linear current regulators. There is no mains input filter in each lamp, and the input stage is as in the attached. (ltspice sim also attached, including ZR431 model)
May I request what are your thoughts on why they have failed?
We have installed one hundred 25W outdoor LED lamps in a town in Bosnia. Sixty failed in just a few weeks. :-(
They all are fed from a single 240VAC generator which delivers power to the 2500 metres of mains cable. A contactor near the generator is used to switch them all on/off. The lamps are fitted every 25 metres along this cable. The cable is overhead (not buried). It’s aluminium cable. Its twisted, though the installers tell us that in places the twisting is “not so tight”. We suspect there is an awful lot of mains stray wiring inductance.
The strange thing is that they have another run of one hundred of the exact same lamps, but in this case the 2500 metre mains cable is buried in the ground. –None of these lamps with the buried cable have failed despite being installed months ago.
The lamps are controlled by microcontrollers in them which slowly dim the lamps as the night goes past the small hours, so as to save energy when few people are really outside.
We suspect that maybe there is some kind of transmission line effect going on, with the long mains cable. We have advised the installers to fit an RC snubber across the contactor, and another across Live/neutral, just downstream of the contactor. We also wonder that with the “not so tightly twisted” mains cable, maybe noise is getting into the long overhead mains cable, and disrupting the microcontroller.
The lamps are not SMPS based, but instead are sucessively switched linear current regulators. There is no mains input filter in each lamp, and the input stage is as in the attached. (ltspice sim also attached, including ZR431 model)
May I request what are your thoughts on why they have failed?