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Change the trailer light bulbs to 24 volts and supply a 24 volt source to power them, in that order.
No, the 12 VDC light must have a DC supply and the transformer voltage as well as being 16 volts which is too high, the output is AC.
If you want your bulbs to last longer then use 130 volt bulb on a 120 volt system. The light emitted by a 130 volt bulb, when comparing it to a 120 volt bulb, will be a bit dimmer.
lamp works on power of volt
They are run on the vehicles 12 volt dc electrical system.
the possibility is the will get burnt
test light or volt meter
Slightly dimmly
A halogen bulb works equally well with AC or DC.
Yes it it is a 12 volt DC light bulb. It will not operate a household 120 volt light bulb.
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This would be a standard procedure for any 12 volt negative ground vehicle. Using a typical generic automotive 12 volt relay, notice that the connections on the relay are numbered 30, 85, 86 and 87. Each connection has a generic function. You would wire a relay for aux lighting as follows, Number 30 would be connected to a 12 volt fused power source from the battery. Number 87 would be connected to the positive lead for the aux light(s) not to exceed 300 watts per relay. Number 85 would be connected to chassis ground. Number 86 would be connected to the 12 volt lead from the manual control aux switch.
Change the trailer light bulbs to 24 volts and supply a 24 volt source to power them, in that order.
I found this light http://www.ecolivingcentre.com.au/products-page/?product_id=23 and it is the perfect size and power for a torch we are making in graphics, the only problem is that it runs on 240 volt ac current and the torch im going to make is going to have a 12 volt dc lead acid battery, is there any way that you can make the battery work with this light
No.
Hook a 12 volt light to a 24 volt system and the light will burn out in seconds. You need a step-down voltage converter to do this.