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Re: Cold Cathode Transformer
Original poster: FIFTYGUY@xxxxxxx
In a message dated 1/18/06 7:01:33 AM Eastern Standard Time,
tesla@xxxxxxxxxx writes:
>Cold cathode tubes do not require the heating
>elements as neon tubes do, thus, they have immediate start up, can
>also be dimmed, and have long life. The tube is what is actually
>"cold cathode", and the transformer current simply needs to be
>capable of starting it.
I thought all neon lighting was cold cathode? I know some
fluorescents are cold cathode - are these what you're thinking of?
Not sure why anybody would want to dim neon (although a friend of
mine did so for a display in his house, using a variac).
15kV seems like an awful lot of voltage to start a fluorescent
bulb - don't they all contain, by definition, mercury vapor that the
neon tube lacks?
120mA also seems on the a low side of running current for even a
single fluorescent bulb?
-Phil LaBudde