Metal Halide can flicker when warming up cause it is starting to get hot inside.
Or Metal Halide can flicker when it is about to burn out. Sometimes they even cycle.
The switch is failing or the wiring within is loose and bridging the contacts
The most likely cause is a fault in the switch. Replace the switch and the problem will most likely disappear.
Between Metal Halide and Mercury Vapor the higher output is emitted from the Metal Halide lamp.
Metal-halide light is helpful for plant growth and is often used for indoor plant growing applications. Metal-halide lights produce blue-frequency light. They can provide the temperature , as well as the spectrum of light that encourages plant growth.
No. A 70 Watt metal halide bulb can not be replaced with a 150 Watt halide bulb.
Metal Halide lamps produce many more ANSI lumens than an LED lamps. However, given this fact, many manufacturers are focusing their production on LED technology because they produce light that lasts 4 to 10 times longer, and they do not get hot like metal halide lamps.
The "salt" you are referring to is actually called silver-halide and are more commonly known as "silver salts". When silver-halide crystals are exposed to light, they form a compound known as "metallic silver"
Between Metal Halide and Mercury Vapor the higher output is emitted from the Metal Halide lamp.
Metal-halide light is helpful for plant growth and is often used for indoor plant growing applications. Metal-halide lights produce blue-frequency light. They can provide the temperature , as well as the spectrum of light that encourages plant growth.
silver halide
The question isn't what you're powering with a particular gauge of wire, but what's the current draw. If the metal halide light can run on a 15 Amp breaker (from the breaker panel), fine use your metal halide in your residential application and run it on the 14 gauge wire.
Common table salt NaCl is a metal halide.
silver
silver.
An HQI metal halide lamp belongs to the family of metal halide HID lamps. Hydrargyum quartz iodide (HQI) lamps differ from standard metal halide lamps in that they are often smaller and are offered in double ended versions and require a special socket. The gasses and metal halide salts used in HQI and standard metal halide lamps are the same.
No. A 70 Watt metal halide bulb can not be replaced with a 150 Watt halide bulb.
Silver chloride, AgCl
yes No Rafe, it will not. Remember when you tried it.
Metal Halide lamps produce many more ANSI lumens than an LED lamps. However, given this fact, many manufacturers are focusing their production on LED technology because they produce light that lasts 4 to 10 times longer, and they do not get hot like metal halide lamps.