CFL energy savings non-existent
With regard to your article on the proposed ban on incandescent
lamps (April 2007), the purpose is to save energy, right? Maybe our politicians
ought to take a step back and look at the bigger picture.
The cost of a product often relates reasonably well to the
energy cost of mining and refining the raw material, manufacturing, packaging
and transport. So a CFL might cost say 10 times the (energy) cost of an
equivalent incandescent to supply to the customer.
I have quite a number of lamps in my house that are essential
but are infrequently used and then only for very short periods of time. I’ve yet
to see a 500W CFL flood lamp and would hate to think of the cost – yet my rear
security light is just that and would operate for perhaps 90 seconds per
year!
The point I am making is that putting CFLs in these locations
will certainly result in a net whole-of-life energy loss. That is, the power
station will have to produce more power to make and run these CFL lamps, over a
lifetime, than the incandescents they replace. Obviously, this argument does not
apply to high-use lamps and I support their application. But in my considerable
experience, the life of CFLs can more typically be around the 300-2000 hour mark
and this seriously impacts the energy benefits of their use. Perhaps the pollies
need to employ engineers to add some logic and sense to their pontifications.
Ian Thompson,
Duncraig, WA.
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SILICON CHIP: the last of the Mohicans
Firstly, congratulations on the outcome of your first
excellence awards, announced in the February 2007 issue. It is really hoped that
this initiative continues to grow. Remember that if even one student is
motivated you have succeeded.
Perhaps I could be described as a "magazine junkie", having
started in my school days with Radio & Hobbies and moving on to such
publications as Electronics World, Electronics Australia, ETI, CQ, QST, 73,
Talking Electronics, Nuts and Volts, Practical Wireless, Amateur Radio and from
its first issue, SILICON CHIP. No doubt you have visited a
newsagency recently and have observed that you are just about the last of the
Mohicans.
We all have pet theories as to the mechanisms driving the
demise of some of these publications and I see the deliberate "dumbing down" of
the country right at the top of my list. In the midst of all of this,
SILICON CHIP has continued to go from
strength to strength, so please take a pat on the back, as my perception is that
it is serving a wider interest base.
In his comments on the publication of articles on valve
amplifiers (Mailbag, page 9, February 2007), Ian Farquar is certainly on the
wrong tram. In the world of hobby electronics, experimentation is a positive way
forward and valve technology, albeit becoming obsolescent, is a valid hobby
interest. While comparisons between valve and solid-state technology may be
valuable, discussions as to which is "better" are meaningless.
Any "hands-on" experience gain-ed through construction will
provide educational benefits well beyond the use of commercially-built equipment
or computer simulation.
It must be said that the current wave of TV advertisements
promoting apprenticeships and encouraging students to turn to maths and science
raise doubts in regard to the motivation behind them. With the anti-science
campaign of recent years being so well organised and funded, and indeed being
very successful, I wonder how it will be possible to put the knitting back
together.
For example, how could a student cope with university level
studies in maths and science-oriented subjects after passing through a school
system where the teachers of these subjects are on the endangered species
list? George McLeod,
via email.
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23W energy saver lamp flashes at night
I would like to bring an interesting side effect of CFLs to
your attention. I bought two 23-watt "Philips Tornado", "Compact High Light
Output", "Energy Saver" light bulbs from Coles in Sydney. The packaging states
that they "can operate within 170-250V range".
These bulbs are very bright (equivalent to 125W incandescent)
and give off a fairly pleasant warm white light. The interesting (and slightly
irritating) bit is that when mounted in a ceiling light and with the wall switch
turned off, the lamp dimly flashes very briefly several times a minute, all
night!
I tested each of the bulbs in various ceiling fittings, finding
the flash rate varies slightly, depending on location. Neither bulb would flash
in a lamp that breaks both Neutral and Active. I could not reproduce the effect
in several other types of "energy saver" lamps that I have at hand.
The light circuit wiring and switches in our house is old and
possibly a bit leaky. The switch is definitely in the "Active" line. An old DMM
shows either zero or 1-2V AC across the open circuit socket with the light
switch off.
I assume that there must be some fairly efficient (non-leaky)
electronics in the bulbs to produce this effect. The only device, to my
knowledge, of similar efficiency is a neon indicator that has sufficiently high
impedance to flicker in this sort of situation.
Lee Braithwaite,
via email.
Comment: we recently observed the flashing CFL effect ourselves
in a number of lamp fittings. We have concluded that it is not a fault in the
CFL or the 240VAC wiring but an artefact of the capacitance of the wiring to the
light switch (from the ceiling junction box). In a typical home, this will be
about six to eight metres of sheathed twin cable and this can be expected to
have a capacitance of maybe 300pF or more.
In effect, this cable capacitance across the switch lets the
CFL bridge rectifier build up sufficient DC to let the circuit fire the CFL
tube, collapsing the DC and letting the cycle repeat ad infinitum. It is acting
as a relaxation oscillator.
While you are aware of the flashing effect only at night, it
happens all the time. If it worries you, it could be stopped by connecting a
small capacitor across the CFL socket, say .01mF (10nF) 250VAC class X2.
Alternatively, the effect could probably be stopped if the cable to the switch
was changed to "twin and earth".
This leakage capacitance effect also occurs with incandescent
lamps (and any other load for that matter) but it is of academic interest
only.
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Playmaster AM/FM tuner morphed into mailbox
Almost the whole nation is awash with idiotic-sized tiny
letterboxes which were designed for the needs of the 1920s. There must be
millions of (A4-size) magazines which are subscribed to in Australia every year
but when they arrive at the average home, we see the mail-person fold it in half
and squeeze it (and any attached CD or DVD) through the tiny slot of the
letterbox.
My personal solution to the problem is the new Playmaster
Snailmail Inbox project. It is the perfect size for A4 magazines and is based on
the Playmaster Stereo FM Tuner-Digital Clock project by Leo Simpson in the
November & December 1978 and January 1979 issues of "Electronics Australia"
magazine. I also plan to have a 150mm diameter newspaper tube suspended
underneath it. Michael Katalinic,
Lavington, NSW.
Comment: what sacrilege! Your old AM/FM tuner project should be
venerated in a softly lit display case in your home rather than having to stand
out in the elements and being force-fed junk mail. We are very sad at this sorry
state of affairs.
Seriously, you are right. But rather than recycle defenceless tuners, there
are millions of old computer cases which would be suitable for the job. Painted
and adorned with a street number, they should last many years.
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GPS frequency reference is not optimum
I would have expected a more reliable design than that used for
the GPS-Based Frequency Reference in the March 2007 issue. The method used to
cascade counters IC4 & IC5 is incorrect.
The TC output of a 74HC160 synchronous counter is not
guaranteed to be glitch-free and the following counter can increment on glitches
in TC. The correct method would have been to cascade the two 74HC160s and the
following JK flipflop synchronously, by connecting the TC from IC4 to CEP of
IC5, and connecting TC from IC5 to the JK inputs of both flipflops in IC6. IC4,
IC5 & IC6 should then be clocked from the same 10MHz source.
The easiest fix to the circuit error is to connect pin 11 of
IC4 to pin 11 of IC3e, connect pin 11 of IC5 to pins 14, 3, 7 & 10 of IC5
and connect pins 1 & 5 of IC6 to pin 2 of IC5.
The phase of the 50kHz signal relative to the 1MHz signal is
unimportant so this fix will work well. The design will then work reliably over
time and temperature even if different man-
ufacturers’ parts are
substituted. Not all 74HC160s are equivalent in performance.
If instead of connecting the outputs of IC8 & IC9 to the
8-bit DAC register (IC12), the phase measurements had been filtered with a
Kalman filter in the processor and then the resultant high resolution averaged
data fed to the 8-bit DAC via a software dither generator to increase the
effective DAC resolution, far higher accuracy and stability would have been
achieved.
In fact the 4046 and associated dividers could have been
eliminated by clocking IC8 + IC9 continuously by the 10MHz oscillator being
disciplined and sampling the current count on the leading edge of the PPS
signal. About 100ns RMS random jitter would need to be added to the PPS signal
to ensure unbiased averaging of the phase samples. A synchroniser (8-bit shift
register) would be used to synchronise the jittered PPS signal to the 10MHz
oscillator being disciplined. A 74AC164 or equivalent performance device would
be required to reduce the rate of synchroniser failure due to metastability to
less than once in a few billion years. HCMOS is way too slow for a
synchroniser.
The second 10MHz oscillator is thereby also eliminated. The
short-term stability of the 10MHz oscillator could be significantly improved by
using a relatively simple discrete bipolar oscillator rather than a noisy gate
oscillator. It should then not be too difficult to achieve a short and long-term
stability of better than a few parts in a billion.
Dr Bruce Griffiths,
Hamilton, NZ.
Comment: see the amended GPS-Based Frequency Reference circuit
in this issue.
Dumped computers have intact records
Here are some ideas for recycling. When I buy a drum pack of
CDs there are spacer washers included on each side of the stack to keep the CDs
from self-destructing in transit. These are perfectly sized for hose to tap
washers on your garden hose.
With the advent of reasonably priced "direct to CD" printers,
the imagination runs wild on all the possible designs for clock faces that could
be printed on a CD (at less than 30c). For $5 or less you can get a quartz clock
movement from craft or $2 shops that fit extremely well in the hole of the CD.
It makes a nice, original, useful, cheap gift.
CD-ROM drives can be used (with a redundant power supply) as a
stand-alone CD player. The analog output is directly compatible with any
consumer amplifier line RCA inputs, so all you need to do is make up a lead with
the right plugs. However, when selecting a CD-ROM, check the front panel buttons
and make sure it has a dedicated play/skip button in addition to the eject
button, so it can be manually operated; some drives don’t have this feature.
Obviously, to keep it simple, there is no software control and it could be
mounted in a box with an environmentally friendly off switch.
On a more serious note, computers from my local tip/recycling
centre/waste management facility now include DDR P4s, in addition to the odd
$10,000 industrial colour laser (HP8550DN, HP4500DN), mono lasers (HP4050DN by
the score), plotters (HP650C, HP755CM) and photocopiers, sometimes with
absolutely nothing wrong with them other than crash damage from being toppled
out of a ute/truck.
However, my concern is the boxes that, for whatever reason,
have become superfluous to present needs and end up on the heap. Some computers
do have minor faults (maybe a dirty connection, blown video card, modem or power
supply, or the RAM needs reseating) but they often come with the entire hard
drive intact, just waiting to be removed and re-sited in my test rig for
perusal.
I have come across computers from a government hospital with
full patient records, from an accountant with every-one and their stuff that
he’s worked for since 1993, a solicitor with 36,000 individual clients, what
they own, where it is, how much it’s worth, etc, defence department machines
with names & addresses of generals and other senior ranks, schools with
personal child details, small businesses and all their affairs, plus aid
agencies (both domestic and international).
I’m no wizard, so if I can access this then what do the
dedicated detectives see when they go looking? By bringing this up I’m probably
shooting myself in the foot and I’ll have to start collecting garbage bags and
food scraps ‘cause there won’t be any more hardware. But I will be able to sleep
soundly knowing that I’ve done the altruistic bit this year. Any other readers
got similar horror stories?
Name and address supplied but
withheld at the writer’s request.
Comment: you would think that any government department or
business would at least security wipe any drives before dumping computers.
Better still, they should pull out the drive and destroy it, to prevent data
recovery.
Modern cars have
too much performance
With respect to Julian Edgar’s scathing article on fuel
economy, etc of modern cars (SILICON CHIP,
December 2006), I fully concur with everything he said but he should have said
more.
In the mid 1970s when the fuel crisis had become reality, I
remember an article quoting vehicle manufacturers’ predictions whereby in the
1990s we would have cars that would achieve 3 litres/100km. This could be one of
those false memories that some of us suffer from time to time but there is no
doubt in my mind it could have been achieved.
Julian blames weight, which is a big factor. I blame the
power-to-weight factor. Many modern cars would have been racing cars in the
1960s and 1970s. Recently, the Topgear TV show put two muscle cars from the
1960s, a Jaguar E-type & an Aston Martin DB4, against a Honda Accord Euro
(2.4l). The Honda murdered the oldies in every test.
How much better would fuel economy now be if we stayed with the
same performance levels as average cars of the 1970s?
John Taylor,
Donvale, Vic.
Ferocious Felines Fouling Flivver’s Fine Paint
Finish
In reference to your correspondent’s problem with cats
scratching the paint of his/her new car (Ask SILICON CHIP,
February 2007), a friend has the same problem and solves it effectively by
putting mothballs in a stocking and leaving the bag on the bonnet of his car.
The cats soon got the message.
Keith Gooley,
Adelaide, SA.
Priority switching
for CB radio
I am writing in response to the request by T. D. (Ask
SILICON CHIP, March 2007) regarding a
mixer for CB and/or mobile signals through his car sound system. This system was
used in the 23-channel "Clarion JC-201E" CB radio, using the "RCJ-001" remote
control head. This operated a relay to switch both stereo channels from the
stereo system, the right channel being silenced and the CB output being fed to
the left channel.
The remote head in this case also housed the channel selector
but this had no role in the audio switching, the incoming audio providing the
drive signal to the switching transistor to operate the relay. The audio was
controlled by the "Squelch" control, hence only a user-selectable level of audio
was applied to the system. This ensured reliable operation and avoiding
undesired interference to the stereo sound.
Don Henriks,
Adelaide, SA.