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#1
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If your lamp is a 4522 then it is a PAR46 bulb, 13 volts 250 watts
5.75 inch dia with a rated life of 25 hours. 250w/13v = 19.23 amps not counting the initial surge of about 5 times the rated current. A 20 amp breaker is too small to power this lamp. You can get lamps in this same size glass housing from 35 to 450 watts. A 4552 lamp is a 250 watt 28 volt PAR64 lamp , 8 inch dia which is the number you listed first This lamp will draw about 9 amps which is about correct for a 20 amp breaker. I suspect someone installed the wrong lamp in your aircraft. Many 14volt 172's use a par36, 4509 lamp which is rated at 13 volts, 100 watts, 7.7amps. You need to look up in the parts list for the aircraft the correct part number of the lamp. On 21 Aug 2004 23:36:14 GMT, (Hankal) wrote: Nobody looks it up. The 4522 lamp is usually used in a swing-down lamp. The landing lamp is a GE 4522. If I posted different, then it is my error and I appologize. Hank |
#2
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I suspect someone installed the wrong lamp in your aircraft. Many
14volt 172's use a par36, 4509 lamp which is rated at 13 volts, 100 watts, 7.7amps. You need to look up in the parts list for the aircraft the correct part number of the lamp. I did look at the parts manual and it states GE 4522 and the breaker is a 20 amp. Would a 4509 or 4905 fit in the same housing? Hank |
#3
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A 4522 lamp is a PAR46 bulb, 13 volts 250 watts 290,000 cp
5.75 inch dia with a rated life of 25 hours. 250w/13v = 19.23 amps If it runs at more than 13 volts it will draw more current and burn out quicker. A 20 amp breaker is running very close to its limit powering this lamp. Since these breakers are thermal breakers a poor crimp or a loose screw on the breaker terminals will cause extra heating and cause the breaker to trip at lower than 20 amps. As these breakers age they trip at lower than rated current due to oxide build up on the internal contacts. The next smaller wattage in the same lamp shell size, PAR 46, is a 4537. This is rated at 100 watts 13v, 200,000 cp My 172M uses two 4905 lamps at 100 watts each which are PAR 36. These are a smaller diameter lamp and will NOT fit in t PAR46 mount. Look for hot crimps on the breaker wires and chafed wires going to the lamp. On 22 Aug 2004 21:59:44 GMT, (Hankal) wrote: I suspect someone installed the wrong lamp in your aircraft. Many 14volt 172's use a par36, 4509 lamp which is rated at 13 volts, 100 watts, 7.7amps. You need to look up in the parts list for the aircraft the correct part number of the lamp. I did look at the parts manual and it states GE 4522 and the breaker is a 20 amp. Would a 4509 or 4905 fit in the same housing? Hank |
#4
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The next smaller wattage in the same lamp shell size, PAR 46, is a
4537. This is rated at 100 watts 13v, 200,000 cp I will put one of those in mine |
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