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Old August 27th 03, 12:53 AM
Lizard Blizzard
 
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James Robinson wrote:

Bob wrote:

Looking for tiny incandescent lamps for my TM-451A Kenwood.



You might try a model train shop. The ones catering to people who build
their own locomotives have small bulbs of various voltages, though 1.5
and 12 volt are the most common. Prices range from $1 to $3 per bulb.


One thing that you should already realize is that the new ones will
eventually burn out, too. So it would be wise to do the right thing and
replace them with LEDs, and they will last tens of thousands of hours.

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Old August 27th 03, 03:51 AM
Fred Nachbaur
 
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Lizard Blizzard wrote:
James Robinson wrote:

Bob wrote:

Looking for tiny incandescent lamps for my TM-451A Kenwood.




You might try a model train shop. The ones catering to people who build
their own locomotives have small bulbs of various voltages, though 1.5
and 12 volt are the most common. Prices range from $1 to $3 per bulb.



One thing that you should already realize is that the new ones will
eventually burn out, too. So it would be wise to do the right thing and
replace them with LEDs, and they will last tens of thousands of hours.


I do that routinely at the shop where I work on TAD M-8's and MD-150's,
which use a similar scheme. However, you have to be sure to add
appropriate limiting resistors for each series string!

Cheers,
Fred
--
+--------------------------------------------+
| Music: http://www3.telus.net/dogstarmusic/ |
| Projects, Vacuum Tubes & other stuff: |
| http://www.dogstar.dantimax.dk |
+--------------------------------------------+

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Old August 27th 03, 03:51 AM
Fred Nachbaur
 
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Lizard Blizzard wrote:
James Robinson wrote:

Bob wrote:

Looking for tiny incandescent lamps for my TM-451A Kenwood.




You might try a model train shop. The ones catering to people who build
their own locomotives have small bulbs of various voltages, though 1.5
and 12 volt are the most common. Prices range from $1 to $3 per bulb.



One thing that you should already realize is that the new ones will
eventually burn out, too. So it would be wise to do the right thing and
replace them with LEDs, and they will last tens of thousands of hours.


I do that routinely at the shop where I work on TAD M-8's and MD-150's,
which use a similar scheme. However, you have to be sure to add
appropriate limiting resistors for each series string!

Cheers,
Fred
--
+--------------------------------------------+
| Music: http://www3.telus.net/dogstarmusic/ |
| Projects, Vacuum Tubes & other stuff: |
| http://www.dogstar.dantimax.dk |
+--------------------------------------------+

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Old August 27th 03, 03:13 PM
Sven Franklyn Weil
 
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In article , Lizard Blizzard wrote:

eventually burn out, too. So it would be wise to do the right thing and
replace them with LEDs, and they will last tens of thousands of hours.


I replaced a grain-of-wheat lightbulb for a clock-radio dial with one from
Radio Shack. The supply voltage is 5 volts so I bought a 12 volt bulb.

Imagine my surprise when these damned things are only rated for 15
hours!!!!

Are there any 5 volt LEDs around?

--
Sven Weil
New York City, U.S.A.
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Old August 27th 03, 03:28 PM
Fred Nachbaur
 
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Sven Franklyn Weil wrote:
In article , Lizard Blizzard wrote:


eventually burn out, too. So it would be wise to do the right thing and
replace them with LEDs, and they will last tens of thousands of hours.



I replaced a grain-of-wheat lightbulb for a clock-radio dial with one from
Radio Shack. The supply voltage is 5 volts so I bought a 12 volt bulb.

Imagine my surprise when these damned things are only rated for 15
hours!!!!

Are there any 5 volt LEDs around?


Any LED can be a 5 volt LED with an appropriate dropping resistor. ;-)

That being said, there *is* an LED rated for operation directly from a 5
volt line. Unfortunately, it's a flasher.

Cheers,
Fred
--
+--------------------------------------------+
| Music: http://www3.telus.net/dogstarmusic/ |
| Projects, Vacuum Tubes & other stuff: |
| http://www.dogstar.dantimax.dk |
+--------------------------------------------+



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Old August 27th 03, 05:10 PM
--- Bill ---
 
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Fred Nachbaur wrote:

Any LED can be a 5 volt LED with an appropriate dropping resistor. ;-)

That being said, there *is* an LED rated for operation directly from a 5
volt line. Unfortunately, it's a flasher.

Cheers,
Fred


I noticed in the new Mouser catalog that there is a line of LED lamps
designed as direcet drop-ins for incandesent lamps. Horribly expensive
at this time.

-Bill


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Old August 28th 03, 02:49 AM
Fred Nachbaur
 
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--- Bill --- wrote:
Fred Nachbaur wrote:

Any LED can be a 5 volt LED with an appropriate dropping resistor. ;-)

That being said, there *is* an LED rated for operation directly from a
5 volt line. Unfortunately, it's a flasher.

Cheers,
Fred



I noticed in the new Mouser catalog that there is a line of LED lamps
designed as direcet drop-ins for incandesent lamps. Horribly expensive
at this time.

-Bill


If you have a parts distributor nearby that stocks (or can order the
Mode line) you might find their variants marginally cheaper:

http://www.mode-elec.com/Products/Page_44-46.pdf

Distributor list he

http://www.mode-elec.com/Distributors/distributors.html

Cheers,
Fred
--
+--------------------------------------------+
| Music: http://www3.telus.net/dogstarmusic/ |
| Projects, Vacuum Tubes & other stuff: |
| http://www.dogstar.dantimax.dk |
+--------------------------------------------+

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Old August 28th 03, 02:49 AM
Fred Nachbaur
 
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--- Bill --- wrote:
Fred Nachbaur wrote:

Any LED can be a 5 volt LED with an appropriate dropping resistor. ;-)

That being said, there *is* an LED rated for operation directly from a
5 volt line. Unfortunately, it's a flasher.

Cheers,
Fred



I noticed in the new Mouser catalog that there is a line of LED lamps
designed as direcet drop-ins for incandesent lamps. Horribly expensive
at this time.

-Bill


If you have a parts distributor nearby that stocks (or can order the
Mode line) you might find their variants marginally cheaper:

http://www.mode-elec.com/Products/Page_44-46.pdf

Distributor list he

http://www.mode-elec.com/Distributors/distributors.html

Cheers,
Fred
--
+--------------------------------------------+
| Music: http://www3.telus.net/dogstarmusic/ |
| Projects, Vacuum Tubes & other stuff: |
| http://www.dogstar.dantimax.dk |
+--------------------------------------------+

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Old August 27th 03, 06:10 PM
Tim Williams
 
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"Fred Nachbaur" wrote in message
news:xe33b.61864$K44.43700@edtnps84...
That being said, there *is* an LED rated for operation directly from a 5
volt line. Unfortunately, it's a flasher.


Either blue or while LEDs have pretty high voltage. Of course, they
require current limiting, which requires an overhead of voltage...

Tim

--
In the immortal words of Ned Flanders: "No foot longs!"
Website @ http://webpages.charter.net/dawill/tmoranwms


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Old August 27th 03, 05:10 PM
--- Bill ---
 
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Fred Nachbaur wrote:

Any LED can be a 5 volt LED with an appropriate dropping resistor. ;-)

That being said, there *is* an LED rated for operation directly from a 5
volt line. Unfortunately, it's a flasher.

Cheers,
Fred


I noticed in the new Mouser catalog that there is a line of LED lamps
designed as direcet drop-ins for incandesent lamps. Horribly expensive
at this time.

-Bill




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