Most compact fluorescent lamps won't work with conventional dimmers, or will damage the dimmer.
Magnetic dimmers will work, however. Answer
Actually, it depends on the design of the lamp. Different companies have different power supplies for the lamps. What works well on one can spell instant death for another. Get a dimmable lamp. The new LED lamps have the same problem. Some work fine with a dimmer, provided one incandescent lamp is left in the fixture. Others go crazy.
Your question is a bit unclear and vague, but if you have a dimmer switch and you turn it all the way to its lowest setting then the switch should not fail because of that. If there is nothing wrong with your electrical system then using a device exactly how it was designed to be used then there is no reason why it would catch on fire.
This type of circuit would never be used. The two way fluorescent system would depend on the voltage being supplied by the two lamp circuit switch. If the switch turns off the two lamp circuit the rest of the circuit with the fluorescent fixture would become inoperable.
The trip odometer switch on the odometer itself is the dimmer on Toyota Sienna. If you turn this switch all the way to the left your panel would become dark. Simply turn the switch to the right and all panel lights would come on. I had a similar problem and the manual bailed me out.
A ballast is an electrical component used with a fluorescent bulb (or mercury vapor lamp or arc lamp) to conduct electricity at each end of the tube. Compact fluorescent light bulbs are dependent on ballast because they use a gas to create light. when the gas is excited by electricity, it emits invisible ultraviolet light that hits the white coating inside the fluorescent bulb. The coating changes the ultraviolet light into light you can see.
A double dimmer switch that can handle a total load of 480 watts would be suitable for 6 x 40 watt halogen bulbs. This means each dimmer switch should have a minimum rating of 240 watts to accommodate the 6 bulbs collectively.
Fluorescent lights cannot be dimmed using a standard dimmer switch designed for incandescent bulbs. You would need a special dimmer switch compatible with fluorescent lights, such as a 0-10V dimmer or a dimmable ballast. These dimmers work by adjusting the voltage or current supplied to the fluorescent light, allowing you to control the brightness. It is important to consult a professional electrician to ensure proper installation and compatibility.
If you have another CFB try it in the same position as the one that is not working. It sounds like the CF bulb is defective.
Yes, compact fluorescent lamps can be dimmed. However it requires a dimming ballast which can be quite expensive and the amount of dimming is limited to about 20%. If you're thinking of using a dimmer you would be better off using an incandescent lamp.
You would have to use a dimmer switch I would think.
A dimmer switch is used for lighting loads and not heating loads. The wattage rating on a dimmer switch is what the manufacturer recommends as the maximum load that the switch can handle. For example if you have ten 100 watt lamps, the total load wattage would be 1000 watts (10 x 100). Too much load for a 600 watt rated dimmer switch but not for a 1000 Watt rated dimmer switch. So you can see that the rating on a dimmer switch governs the maximum wattage load that can be connected in the circuit that is to be controlled.
I would suspect the dimmer switch or "combination switch".
Yes, it could.
i would say that your dimmer switch is probably broken
Your question is a bit unclear and vague, but if you have a dimmer switch and you turn it all the way to its lowest setting then the switch should not fail because of that. If there is nothing wrong with your electrical system then using a device exactly how it was designed to be used then there is no reason why it would catch on fire.
the low beams should not be on a fuse it will either be the dimmer switch or the headlight its self. for your problem i would check the dimmer switch first J.
Its the dimmer switch bad.
This type of circuit would never be used. The two way fluorescent system would depend on the voltage being supplied by the two lamp circuit switch. If the switch turns off the two lamp circuit the rest of the circuit with the fluorescent fixture would become inoperable.