The biggest challenge is getting bulbs now. You can find chinese ones on ebay, but the reflectors now are pretty rare and very expensive to have replaced if you could even find one. All the modern bulbs are made for DLP machines, and appropriate adapters would need to be made to fit these modern bulbs in an old lamphouse. All the lamps and rectifiers I pulled out of a decommissioned theater were 1600's but I left the bulbs behind. The rationale was I had to go through every machine in the building to find two reflectors that weren't already destroyed by an explosion. Towards the end of film, no one was spending money on bulbs, and was trying to make it to the finish line without buying more supplies.
The datasheet for any bulb will show what its current range is. Most bulbs will go down to 60% of rated current and still run OK. Depending on the age of the bulb, the arc can get unstable and frequently go out if your down too far. Your 2500's may go down to 1200W or so, which would be bright, but you could always defocus the lamp a little.
As far as the rectifier, you could try and retap the transformer for higher voltage and see what you get on single phase. All the transformer supplies I've seen control bulb current by controlling output voltage. The gap in the bulb has a certain amount of resistance, and raising the voltage across the gap also raises the current, and vice versa. On these strong rectifiers I have, I ran them on 120V (they are 240V nominal) and was able to run a 500W lamp without issue. Its still pretty inefficient compared to a switcher (Even the Strongs pulled over 1KVA to make 500W of light). The 500W switching rectifier I built pulls 650W out of the wall to make 500W, and has PFC for unity power factor.
Josh
The datasheet for any bulb will show what its current range is. Most bulbs will go down to 60% of rated current and still run OK. Depending on the age of the bulb, the arc can get unstable and frequently go out if your down too far. Your 2500's may go down to 1200W or so, which would be bright, but you could always defocus the lamp a little.
As far as the rectifier, you could try and retap the transformer for higher voltage and see what you get on single phase. All the transformer supplies I've seen control bulb current by controlling output voltage. The gap in the bulb has a certain amount of resistance, and raising the voltage across the gap also raises the current, and vice versa. On these strong rectifiers I have, I ran them on 120V (they are 240V nominal) and was able to run a 500W lamp without issue. Its still pretty inefficient compared to a switcher (Even the Strongs pulled over 1KVA to make 500W of light). The 500W switching rectifier I built pulls 650W out of the wall to make 500W, and has PFC for unity power factor.
Josh
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