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Author
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Topic: Strange crud found on xenon bulb envelope
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Leo Enticknap
Film God
Posts: 7474
From: Loma Linda, CA
Registered: Jul 2000
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posted 06-13-2016 12:18 PM
At one of our theaters, we use an NEC 3200S with a 3kW bulb for 2-D shows, and we swap in a 7kW bulb whenever we play a 3-D DCP, to ensure adequate light. Last night was a 3-D night. When I was swapping the smaller bulb back in after the show, I noticed some strange, dark yellow/cream deposits along the envelope of the 7kW bulb while removing and repacking it, near the seam and the wire. The bulb is an Ushio 70SN with 102 hours on the clock (out of 300 warranty).
Apologies for the poor quality cellphone pic (artistic photography not easy while wearing a visor, Kevlar jacket and gloves!) - I've Photoshopped it slightly to enhance the detail. The deposits are just above the wire, and look dark yellow/cream colored under regular room lighting.
I tried to rub them off gently using a (dry) lens cleaning cloth, but they wouldn't budge. Whatever this stuff is, it's baked on solidly.
Any ideas? We've always been scrupulously careful to handle bulbs by the ends only, and after installing one I've also rubbed the ends with a microfiber cloth to even remove any traces of fingerprints from those. The lamphouse is vacuumed out regularly and the air filters changed twice a year, too. Some sort of chemical reaction to do with the wire?
I'd also be grateful for everyone's thoughts as to whether this bulb is safe to continue to use. It performed perfectly last night (running at 160 amps / 6.1kW), and gave me no cause for alarm, but if this contamination could pose an explosion risk, then obviously (a) we can't continue to use it, and (b) we're looking at a warranty return, given that it's only a third of the way through its warranty life.
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Leo Enticknap
Film God
Posts: 7474
From: Loma Linda, CA
Registered: Jul 2000
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posted 06-15-2016 02:13 AM
Thanks Buck - I was so focused on the crud alongside the trigger wire that I failed to notice the heat damage on the cathode mounting point. It's there alight, though interestingly, on one side of the bulb only (the side visible with the trigger wire facing upwards: rotate the bulb 180º - trigger wire facing down - and it looks as new).
I wonder if it was subjected to overheating at some point in its career. We had an incident recently in which one of my co-workers forgot to switch on the exhaust fan and cooked a 3kW bulb (grrrr...). This bulb is at least three years old (it was bought before I was hired) and possibly a bit older: we show 3-D DCPs pretty rarely, and so it probably gets swapped in and out around 10 times a year, being run for 2-6 hours each time. The only exception to that was a week-long run of the Jean-Luc Godard 3-D movie last year (the pretentious, esoteric thing with the naked couple and the dog - trying to remember the name but it's the end of a long day and I can't), when it did around 30 hours in a week.
Given its age (in years, if not hours burned), I'd probably be on a sticky wicket trying to return it for a warranty claim. I am, however, relieved at Ian's comment that he's noticed these deposits near the trigger wire on bulbs that have gone to warranty hours without any explosion. That being the case, I think I'll probably continue to run it until it either reaches warranty hours, or starts to flicker and/or loses light output beyond acceptability. Thanks folks.
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