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Why is one lightbulb in a string illuminated? [on hold]
HSR412 (solid state relay) parallel circuit connection not working?Why is this light in this parallel circuit only working in series?Is this the ideal parallel circuit or is this a combination of series and parallel?Full Spectrum LED(400nm~840nm) vs Grow Light LED (RED+BLUE)Wiring a bunch of micro LED fairy lights to a single power source in parallelWEMO switch and Sodium lightingChoosing the right transformer to replace batteries?1-wire fairy lightsHigh(er) Current AC Flasher CircuitLED Light changes color on being turned on/off simultaneously
.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;
$begingroup$
I noticed that in various strings of lights only one was illuminated. It seems implausible that all but one out of several hundred blew. What caused this and why did this particular light turn on?
parallel lighting
New contributor
$endgroup$
put on hold as primarily opinion-based by laptop2d, brhans, Elliot Alderson, pipe, W5VO♦ 2 days ago
Many good questions generate some degree of opinion based on expert experience, but answers to this question will tend to be almost entirely based on opinions, rather than facts, references, or specific expertise. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
add a comment |
$begingroup$
I noticed that in various strings of lights only one was illuminated. It seems implausible that all but one out of several hundred blew. What caused this and why did this particular light turn on?
parallel lighting
New contributor
$endgroup$
put on hold as primarily opinion-based by laptop2d, brhans, Elliot Alderson, pipe, W5VO♦ 2 days ago
Many good questions generate some degree of opinion based on expert experience, but answers to this question will tend to be almost entirely based on opinions, rather than facts, references, or specific expertise. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
1
$begingroup$
I think there is too less information to answer this question without speculation, and there is probably neither no way to validate an answer in order to accept it.
$endgroup$
– Huisman
Apr 22 at 21:33
1
$begingroup$
Never seen serial streetlights on cables from street-corners before. But if there enough mutual coupling to power 1 bulb out of say 30 in series. The bulb with the fastest warm-up time draws all the induced voltage ( e.g. 240/30) due to 10:1 PTC effects
$endgroup$
– Sunnyskyguy EE75
Apr 22 at 22:14
$begingroup$
Looks a lovely park not far from the Welsh coast
$endgroup$
– Sunnyskyguy EE75
Apr 22 at 22:21
1
$begingroup$
How about this: The lamps are on a photocell-switched circuit, but one lamp is lit constantly to indicate that the circuit is powered. It's not dark enough to trigger to photocell switch.
$endgroup$
– Hot Licks
Apr 23 at 1:23
1
$begingroup$
Holiday lights have the so called "shunt wire". The shunt is a small wire wrapped beneath the filament that allows current to continue flowing through the circuit by creating a path of lower resistance than the original path in case the filament opens. For details -> energy.gov/articles/how-do-holiday-lights-work
$endgroup$
– Gianluca Ghettini
2 days ago
add a comment |
$begingroup$
I noticed that in various strings of lights only one was illuminated. It seems implausible that all but one out of several hundred blew. What caused this and why did this particular light turn on?
parallel lighting
New contributor
$endgroup$
I noticed that in various strings of lights only one was illuminated. It seems implausible that all but one out of several hundred blew. What caused this and why did this particular light turn on?
parallel lighting
parallel lighting
New contributor
New contributor
New contributor
asked Apr 22 at 20:30
dothyphendotdothyphendot
1262
1262
New contributor
New contributor
put on hold as primarily opinion-based by laptop2d, brhans, Elliot Alderson, pipe, W5VO♦ 2 days ago
Many good questions generate some degree of opinion based on expert experience, but answers to this question will tend to be almost entirely based on opinions, rather than facts, references, or specific expertise. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
put on hold as primarily opinion-based by laptop2d, brhans, Elliot Alderson, pipe, W5VO♦ 2 days ago
Many good questions generate some degree of opinion based on expert experience, but answers to this question will tend to be almost entirely based on opinions, rather than facts, references, or specific expertise. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
1
$begingroup$
I think there is too less information to answer this question without speculation, and there is probably neither no way to validate an answer in order to accept it.
$endgroup$
– Huisman
Apr 22 at 21:33
1
$begingroup$
Never seen serial streetlights on cables from street-corners before. But if there enough mutual coupling to power 1 bulb out of say 30 in series. The bulb with the fastest warm-up time draws all the induced voltage ( e.g. 240/30) due to 10:1 PTC effects
$endgroup$
– Sunnyskyguy EE75
Apr 22 at 22:14
$begingroup$
Looks a lovely park not far from the Welsh coast
$endgroup$
– Sunnyskyguy EE75
Apr 22 at 22:21
1
$begingroup$
How about this: The lamps are on a photocell-switched circuit, but one lamp is lit constantly to indicate that the circuit is powered. It's not dark enough to trigger to photocell switch.
$endgroup$
– Hot Licks
Apr 23 at 1:23
1
$begingroup$
Holiday lights have the so called "shunt wire". The shunt is a small wire wrapped beneath the filament that allows current to continue flowing through the circuit by creating a path of lower resistance than the original path in case the filament opens. For details -> energy.gov/articles/how-do-holiday-lights-work
$endgroup$
– Gianluca Ghettini
2 days ago
add a comment |
1
$begingroup$
I think there is too less information to answer this question without speculation, and there is probably neither no way to validate an answer in order to accept it.
$endgroup$
– Huisman
Apr 22 at 21:33
1
$begingroup$
Never seen serial streetlights on cables from street-corners before. But if there enough mutual coupling to power 1 bulb out of say 30 in series. The bulb with the fastest warm-up time draws all the induced voltage ( e.g. 240/30) due to 10:1 PTC effects
$endgroup$
– Sunnyskyguy EE75
Apr 22 at 22:14
$begingroup$
Looks a lovely park not far from the Welsh coast
$endgroup$
– Sunnyskyguy EE75
Apr 22 at 22:21
1
$begingroup$
How about this: The lamps are on a photocell-switched circuit, but one lamp is lit constantly to indicate that the circuit is powered. It's not dark enough to trigger to photocell switch.
$endgroup$
– Hot Licks
Apr 23 at 1:23
1
$begingroup$
Holiday lights have the so called "shunt wire". The shunt is a small wire wrapped beneath the filament that allows current to continue flowing through the circuit by creating a path of lower resistance than the original path in case the filament opens. For details -> energy.gov/articles/how-do-holiday-lights-work
$endgroup$
– Gianluca Ghettini
2 days ago
1
1
$begingroup$
I think there is too less information to answer this question without speculation, and there is probably neither no way to validate an answer in order to accept it.
$endgroup$
– Huisman
Apr 22 at 21:33
$begingroup$
I think there is too less information to answer this question without speculation, and there is probably neither no way to validate an answer in order to accept it.
$endgroup$
– Huisman
Apr 22 at 21:33
1
1
$begingroup$
Never seen serial streetlights on cables from street-corners before. But if there enough mutual coupling to power 1 bulb out of say 30 in series. The bulb with the fastest warm-up time draws all the induced voltage ( e.g. 240/30) due to 10:1 PTC effects
$endgroup$
– Sunnyskyguy EE75
Apr 22 at 22:14
$begingroup$
Never seen serial streetlights on cables from street-corners before. But if there enough mutual coupling to power 1 bulb out of say 30 in series. The bulb with the fastest warm-up time draws all the induced voltage ( e.g. 240/30) due to 10:1 PTC effects
$endgroup$
– Sunnyskyguy EE75
Apr 22 at 22:14
$begingroup$
Looks a lovely park not far from the Welsh coast
$endgroup$
– Sunnyskyguy EE75
Apr 22 at 22:21
$begingroup$
Looks a lovely park not far from the Welsh coast
$endgroup$
– Sunnyskyguy EE75
Apr 22 at 22:21
1
1
$begingroup$
How about this: The lamps are on a photocell-switched circuit, but one lamp is lit constantly to indicate that the circuit is powered. It's not dark enough to trigger to photocell switch.
$endgroup$
– Hot Licks
Apr 23 at 1:23
$begingroup$
How about this: The lamps are on a photocell-switched circuit, but one lamp is lit constantly to indicate that the circuit is powered. It's not dark enough to trigger to photocell switch.
$endgroup$
– Hot Licks
Apr 23 at 1:23
1
1
$begingroup$
Holiday lights have the so called "shunt wire". The shunt is a small wire wrapped beneath the filament that allows current to continue flowing through the circuit by creating a path of lower resistance than the original path in case the filament opens. For details -> energy.gov/articles/how-do-holiday-lights-work
$endgroup$
– Gianluca Ghettini
2 days ago
$begingroup$
Holiday lights have the so called "shunt wire". The shunt is a small wire wrapped beneath the filament that allows current to continue flowing through the circuit by creating a path of lower resistance than the original path in case the filament opens. For details -> energy.gov/articles/how-do-holiday-lights-work
$endgroup$
– Gianluca Ghettini
2 days ago
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
$begingroup$
Figure 1. The intriguing light bulb has caught the attention of Smokey the Bear too.
There can only be a few possibilities:
- The lamps are spread across several phases or split phases, the other phases are off and all but this lamp has blown. This is very unlikely.
- Some joker has installed a battery powered lamp. This too seems unlikely.
"When you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth." Sherlock Holmes.
- The impossible has happened and all have blown but one. This could happen with an overvoltage - by lightning, for example. Some combination of poor contact, tough filament, arcing in another lamp (which would limit the voltage), etc., may be enough to let it survive.
Another possibility is that the power is on and that each bulb has its own light sensor (like some streetlights) and this one is the first to switch on. Again, unlikely.
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
I'd go with the battery powered hypothesis, there are available lamps that include a battery back-up
$endgroup$
– Jasen
Apr 22 at 21:24
$begingroup$
Are these lamps connected in series or parallel? Or several series strings in parallel?
$endgroup$
– Toor
Apr 22 at 21:24
$begingroup$
looks like parallel festoon fittings to me
$endgroup$
– Jasen
Apr 22 at 21:25
1
$begingroup$
Then the o/v has my vote. Someone may have fitted a single 275V (very likely 260V) globe as a spare. We had these in Western Australia for a long time and they lasted forever back when we were 250V and the rest of the country 240V. (almost always higher in both cases).
$endgroup$
– mckenzm
Apr 23 at 0:54
1
$begingroup$
What about if someone replaced one of the bulbs with an LED lamp? They can sometimes light up on a much lower voltage.
$endgroup$
– Thomas Padron-McCarthy
2 days ago
|
show 2 more comments
$begingroup$
I'd go with the implausible explanation. All the bulbs are blown except the one.
Most festoon lights use a screw-in socket so all the lights are in parallel:
It's certainly unlikely in the extreme that the lights are in any way series connected.
I'd suggest that the string was perhaps hit by a truck (or a surge) and a bunch of the lights broke.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
$begingroup$
Figure 1. The intriguing light bulb has caught the attention of Smokey the Bear too.
There can only be a few possibilities:
- The lamps are spread across several phases or split phases, the other phases are off and all but this lamp has blown. This is very unlikely.
- Some joker has installed a battery powered lamp. This too seems unlikely.
"When you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth." Sherlock Holmes.
- The impossible has happened and all have blown but one. This could happen with an overvoltage - by lightning, for example. Some combination of poor contact, tough filament, arcing in another lamp (which would limit the voltage), etc., may be enough to let it survive.
Another possibility is that the power is on and that each bulb has its own light sensor (like some streetlights) and this one is the first to switch on. Again, unlikely.
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
I'd go with the battery powered hypothesis, there are available lamps that include a battery back-up
$endgroup$
– Jasen
Apr 22 at 21:24
$begingroup$
Are these lamps connected in series or parallel? Or several series strings in parallel?
$endgroup$
– Toor
Apr 22 at 21:24
$begingroup$
looks like parallel festoon fittings to me
$endgroup$
– Jasen
Apr 22 at 21:25
1
$begingroup$
Then the o/v has my vote. Someone may have fitted a single 275V (very likely 260V) globe as a spare. We had these in Western Australia for a long time and they lasted forever back when we were 250V and the rest of the country 240V. (almost always higher in both cases).
$endgroup$
– mckenzm
Apr 23 at 0:54
1
$begingroup$
What about if someone replaced one of the bulbs with an LED lamp? They can sometimes light up on a much lower voltage.
$endgroup$
– Thomas Padron-McCarthy
2 days ago
|
show 2 more comments
$begingroup$
Figure 1. The intriguing light bulb has caught the attention of Smokey the Bear too.
There can only be a few possibilities:
- The lamps are spread across several phases or split phases, the other phases are off and all but this lamp has blown. This is very unlikely.
- Some joker has installed a battery powered lamp. This too seems unlikely.
"When you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth." Sherlock Holmes.
- The impossible has happened and all have blown but one. This could happen with an overvoltage - by lightning, for example. Some combination of poor contact, tough filament, arcing in another lamp (which would limit the voltage), etc., may be enough to let it survive.
Another possibility is that the power is on and that each bulb has its own light sensor (like some streetlights) and this one is the first to switch on. Again, unlikely.
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
I'd go with the battery powered hypothesis, there are available lamps that include a battery back-up
$endgroup$
– Jasen
Apr 22 at 21:24
$begingroup$
Are these lamps connected in series or parallel? Or several series strings in parallel?
$endgroup$
– Toor
Apr 22 at 21:24
$begingroup$
looks like parallel festoon fittings to me
$endgroup$
– Jasen
Apr 22 at 21:25
1
$begingroup$
Then the o/v has my vote. Someone may have fitted a single 275V (very likely 260V) globe as a spare. We had these in Western Australia for a long time and they lasted forever back when we were 250V and the rest of the country 240V. (almost always higher in both cases).
$endgroup$
– mckenzm
Apr 23 at 0:54
1
$begingroup$
What about if someone replaced one of the bulbs with an LED lamp? They can sometimes light up on a much lower voltage.
$endgroup$
– Thomas Padron-McCarthy
2 days ago
|
show 2 more comments
$begingroup$
Figure 1. The intriguing light bulb has caught the attention of Smokey the Bear too.
There can only be a few possibilities:
- The lamps are spread across several phases or split phases, the other phases are off and all but this lamp has blown. This is very unlikely.
- Some joker has installed a battery powered lamp. This too seems unlikely.
"When you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth." Sherlock Holmes.
- The impossible has happened and all have blown but one. This could happen with an overvoltage - by lightning, for example. Some combination of poor contact, tough filament, arcing in another lamp (which would limit the voltage), etc., may be enough to let it survive.
Another possibility is that the power is on and that each bulb has its own light sensor (like some streetlights) and this one is the first to switch on. Again, unlikely.
$endgroup$
Figure 1. The intriguing light bulb has caught the attention of Smokey the Bear too.
There can only be a few possibilities:
- The lamps are spread across several phases or split phases, the other phases are off and all but this lamp has blown. This is very unlikely.
- Some joker has installed a battery powered lamp. This too seems unlikely.
"When you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth." Sherlock Holmes.
- The impossible has happened and all have blown but one. This could happen with an overvoltage - by lightning, for example. Some combination of poor contact, tough filament, arcing in another lamp (which would limit the voltage), etc., may be enough to let it survive.
Another possibility is that the power is on and that each bulb has its own light sensor (like some streetlights) and this one is the first to switch on. Again, unlikely.
edited Apr 22 at 21:42
answered Apr 22 at 21:06
TransistorTransistor
89.6k787192
89.6k787192
$begingroup$
I'd go with the battery powered hypothesis, there are available lamps that include a battery back-up
$endgroup$
– Jasen
Apr 22 at 21:24
$begingroup$
Are these lamps connected in series or parallel? Or several series strings in parallel?
$endgroup$
– Toor
Apr 22 at 21:24
$begingroup$
looks like parallel festoon fittings to me
$endgroup$
– Jasen
Apr 22 at 21:25
1
$begingroup$
Then the o/v has my vote. Someone may have fitted a single 275V (very likely 260V) globe as a spare. We had these in Western Australia for a long time and they lasted forever back when we were 250V and the rest of the country 240V. (almost always higher in both cases).
$endgroup$
– mckenzm
Apr 23 at 0:54
1
$begingroup$
What about if someone replaced one of the bulbs with an LED lamp? They can sometimes light up on a much lower voltage.
$endgroup$
– Thomas Padron-McCarthy
2 days ago
|
show 2 more comments
$begingroup$
I'd go with the battery powered hypothesis, there are available lamps that include a battery back-up
$endgroup$
– Jasen
Apr 22 at 21:24
$begingroup$
Are these lamps connected in series or parallel? Or several series strings in parallel?
$endgroup$
– Toor
Apr 22 at 21:24
$begingroup$
looks like parallel festoon fittings to me
$endgroup$
– Jasen
Apr 22 at 21:25
1
$begingroup$
Then the o/v has my vote. Someone may have fitted a single 275V (very likely 260V) globe as a spare. We had these in Western Australia for a long time and they lasted forever back when we were 250V and the rest of the country 240V. (almost always higher in both cases).
$endgroup$
– mckenzm
Apr 23 at 0:54
1
$begingroup$
What about if someone replaced one of the bulbs with an LED lamp? They can sometimes light up on a much lower voltage.
$endgroup$
– Thomas Padron-McCarthy
2 days ago
$begingroup$
I'd go with the battery powered hypothesis, there are available lamps that include a battery back-up
$endgroup$
– Jasen
Apr 22 at 21:24
$begingroup$
I'd go with the battery powered hypothesis, there are available lamps that include a battery back-up
$endgroup$
– Jasen
Apr 22 at 21:24
$begingroup$
Are these lamps connected in series or parallel? Or several series strings in parallel?
$endgroup$
– Toor
Apr 22 at 21:24
$begingroup$
Are these lamps connected in series or parallel? Or several series strings in parallel?
$endgroup$
– Toor
Apr 22 at 21:24
$begingroup$
looks like parallel festoon fittings to me
$endgroup$
– Jasen
Apr 22 at 21:25
$begingroup$
looks like parallel festoon fittings to me
$endgroup$
– Jasen
Apr 22 at 21:25
1
1
$begingroup$
Then the o/v has my vote. Someone may have fitted a single 275V (very likely 260V) globe as a spare. We had these in Western Australia for a long time and they lasted forever back when we were 250V and the rest of the country 240V. (almost always higher in both cases).
$endgroup$
– mckenzm
Apr 23 at 0:54
$begingroup$
Then the o/v has my vote. Someone may have fitted a single 275V (very likely 260V) globe as a spare. We had these in Western Australia for a long time and they lasted forever back when we were 250V and the rest of the country 240V. (almost always higher in both cases).
$endgroup$
– mckenzm
Apr 23 at 0:54
1
1
$begingroup$
What about if someone replaced one of the bulbs with an LED lamp? They can sometimes light up on a much lower voltage.
$endgroup$
– Thomas Padron-McCarthy
2 days ago
$begingroup$
What about if someone replaced one of the bulbs with an LED lamp? They can sometimes light up on a much lower voltage.
$endgroup$
– Thomas Padron-McCarthy
2 days ago
|
show 2 more comments
$begingroup$
I'd go with the implausible explanation. All the bulbs are blown except the one.
Most festoon lights use a screw-in socket so all the lights are in parallel:
It's certainly unlikely in the extreme that the lights are in any way series connected.
I'd suggest that the string was perhaps hit by a truck (or a surge) and a bunch of the lights broke.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
I'd go with the implausible explanation. All the bulbs are blown except the one.
Most festoon lights use a screw-in socket so all the lights are in parallel:
It's certainly unlikely in the extreme that the lights are in any way series connected.
I'd suggest that the string was perhaps hit by a truck (or a surge) and a bunch of the lights broke.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
I'd go with the implausible explanation. All the bulbs are blown except the one.
Most festoon lights use a screw-in socket so all the lights are in parallel:
It's certainly unlikely in the extreme that the lights are in any way series connected.
I'd suggest that the string was perhaps hit by a truck (or a surge) and a bunch of the lights broke.
$endgroup$
I'd go with the implausible explanation. All the bulbs are blown except the one.
Most festoon lights use a screw-in socket so all the lights are in parallel:
It's certainly unlikely in the extreme that the lights are in any way series connected.
I'd suggest that the string was perhaps hit by a truck (or a surge) and a bunch of the lights broke.
edited 2 days ago
answered Apr 22 at 21:40
Jack CreaseyJack Creasey
15.5k2823
15.5k2823
add a comment |
add a comment |
1
$begingroup$
I think there is too less information to answer this question without speculation, and there is probably neither no way to validate an answer in order to accept it.
$endgroup$
– Huisman
Apr 22 at 21:33
1
$begingroup$
Never seen serial streetlights on cables from street-corners before. But if there enough mutual coupling to power 1 bulb out of say 30 in series. The bulb with the fastest warm-up time draws all the induced voltage ( e.g. 240/30) due to 10:1 PTC effects
$endgroup$
– Sunnyskyguy EE75
Apr 22 at 22:14
$begingroup$
Looks a lovely park not far from the Welsh coast
$endgroup$
– Sunnyskyguy EE75
Apr 22 at 22:21
1
$begingroup$
How about this: The lamps are on a photocell-switched circuit, but one lamp is lit constantly to indicate that the circuit is powered. It's not dark enough to trigger to photocell switch.
$endgroup$
– Hot Licks
Apr 23 at 1:23
1
$begingroup$
Holiday lights have the so called "shunt wire". The shunt is a small wire wrapped beneath the filament that allows current to continue flowing through the circuit by creating a path of lower resistance than the original path in case the filament opens. For details -> energy.gov/articles/how-do-holiday-lights-work
$endgroup$
– Gianluca Ghettini
2 days ago