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What are some important characteristics of metal halide lamps? (cont'd)
Figure 12 shows the average chromaticities (u', v'), and their associated standard deviations, in the CIE 1976 uniform color space for the 250 W MH lamps produced by Manufacturers C and D, respectively.
| Figure 12: Comparison of color variations at 100 h of operation and at 40% of rated lamp life for 250 W MH lamps from Manufacturers C and D |
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Manufacturer C rates its 250 W MH lamps, both pulse-start and probe-start, at 4200 K. Manufacturer D rates its lamps at 4000 K. Figure 12 shows that nearly all of the chromaticities of the lamps produced by both manufacturers lie outside the four-step MacAdam ellipse designated as cool by ANSI for linear fluorescent lamps. There is greater variation among the lamps produced by Manufacturer C than those produced by Manufacturer D, both at the 100 h mark and at 40% of rated lamp life. These variations are more clearly shown in Figure 13.
| Figure 13: Average color variations at 100 h of operation and at 40% of rated lamp life for 250 W MH lamps from Manufacturers C and D |
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The paired histogram bars in Figure 13 represent the color variations in each of the four groups (pulse-start and probe-start from two manufacturers) of six, 250 W MH lamps. The average chromaticity coordinates of the six lamps in each sample for both testing periods (at 100 h and at 40% of rated life) are indicated below each histogram bar. As in Figure 10, the height of each histogram bar represents the average deviation of the six lamps in that group from their average chromaticity coordinates measured in "approximate MacAdam radii"; a four-step MacAdam ellipse has an approximate MacAdam radius of 4. Assuming that the four-step MacAdam ellipse represents a useful tolerance criterion in lamp color, it appears that only the pulse-start lamp from Manufacturer D would have "acceptable" color variation at both 100 h and at 40% of rated life. Interestingly, Manufacturer C has greater variability in lamp color at 100 h than does Manufacturer D, whereas the reverse is true at 40% of rated lamp life. However, it does not appear that probe-start MH lamps, as a group, have greater, or worse, color variations than pulse-start MH lamps.
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