Lamps - Incandescents, Neons

Image Part Number Description / PDF Quantity Rfq
1918

1918

JKL Components Corporation

LAMP INCAN RT-1.75 WIRE TERM 32V

0

44

44

Visual Communications Company, LLC

LAMP INCAN RT-3.25 MIN BAYO 6.3V

735

2ML

2ML

Visual Communications Company, LLC

LAMP NEON R4MM WIRE 65VAC 90VDC

4581

8-3995-10

8-3995-10

Visual Communications Company, LLC

LAMP INCAN RT-3.25 MIN BAYO 130V

293

7714

7714

JKL Components Corporation

LAMP INCANDESCENT RT-1 BI-PIN 5V

0

8098SBP

8098SBP

JKL Components Corporation

LAMP INCAND RT-1 BI-PIN 14V

0

3652

3652

JKL Components Corporation

LAMP INCAND RT-3.25 WEDGE 13.5V

0

7374

7374

Visual Communications Company, LLC

LAMP INCAND RT-1.75 BI-PIN 28V

0

E85

E85

JKL Components Corporation

LAMP INCAND RT-1.5 WEDGE 28V

0

7380

7380

JKL Components Corporation

LAMP INCAND RT-1.75 BI-PIN 6.3V

0

08-006

08-006

NTE Electronics, Inc.

LAMP HALOGEN BULB GY6.35 12V

233

A2A

A2A

Visual Communications Company, LLC

LAMP NEON T-2 WIRE TERM 125V

2196

60MB

60MB

JKL Components Corporation

LAMP INCAND T-2 MINI BAYONET 60V

0

6839

6839

Oshino Lamps

SMF T1 LAMP

1900

7361

7361

Visual Communications Company, LLC

LAMP INCAND RT-1.75 BI-PIN 5V

1506

2181

2181

Visual Communications Company, LLC

LAMP INCAND RT-1.75 WIRE 6.3V

500

219

219

Visual Communications Company, LLC

LAMP INCAN RG-3.5 MINI BAYO 6.3V

0

AML91LA85

AML91LA85

Honeywell Sensing and Productivity Solutions

LAMP INCAND RT-1.75 WEDGE 28V

129

A1C

A1C

Visual Communications Company, LLC

LAMP NEON R6.2MM WIRE TERM 95V

12409

37

37

JKL Components Corporation

LAMP INCAND RT-1.75 WEDGE 14V

0

Lamps - Incandescents, Neons

1. Overview

Optoelectronics lamps refer to light sources that convert electrical energy into optical radiation through specific physical mechanisms. Incandescent lamps generate light by heating tungsten filaments to high temperatures, while neon lamps produce light through gas discharge in noble gases (e.g., neon, argon). Though gradually replaced by LEDs, these traditional lamps remain critical in specialized applications requiring continuous spectra (incandescents) or distinctive colored lighting (neons).

2. Major Types and Functional Classification

TypeFunctional FeaturesApplication Examples
Standard IncandescentWide spectral output (visible + IR), low efficacy (~10 lm/W), short lifespan ( 1,000h)Residential lighting, heat lamps
Halogen LampsQuartz envelope with halogen gas, higher efficacy ( 20 lm/W), longer lifespan ( 2,000h)Automotive headlights, studio lighting
Neon LampsCold-cathode gas discharge, monochromatic emission (colors determined by gas type)Signage, voltage indicators
Miniature NeonLow power consumption (mA range), compact sizeInstrument panels, pilot lights

3. Structure and Components

Incandescent lamps consist of: (1) Tungsten filament (emits light when heated), (2) Glass envelope (filled with argon/nitrogen), (3) Base (Edison screw or bayonet type). Neon lamps contain: (1) Glass tube (shaped as required), (2) Electrodes (cathode/anode), (3) Noble gas mixture (pressure: 1-10 torr), (4) Optional phosphor coating (for color variation).

4. Key Technical Specifications

ParameterDescriptionImportance
Luminous Flux (lm)Measured light outputDetermines illumination level
Color Temperature (K)2700K (incandescent) vs. 10,000-20,000K (neon)Affects visual perception and application suitability
Lifespan (hours)500-10,000h (varies by type)Impacts maintenance frequency
Power Consumption (W)40W-500W (incandescent), 1W-25W (neon)Energy efficiency considerations
Starting Voltage (V)100-250V (neon requires higher voltage)Driver circuit design requirements

5. Application Fields

  • Incandescents: Theater lighting (dimming compatibility), infrared heating (IR lamps), aviation (halogen for landing lights)
  • Neons: Brand signage (custom shapes), plasma display panels, radiation detection equipment
  • Case Study: Philips Masterline halogen lamps used in museum spotlights for accurate color rendering

6. Leading Manufacturers and Products

ManufacturerRepresentative ProductKey Features
OSRAM64636 HLX24V/150W halogen lamp for medical lighting
GE Lighting15A19GH15W rough-service incandescent for industrial use
Letron NeonLN-350Programmable neon signage system
HoneywellNN-M22Miniature neon indicator for aerospace panels

7. Selection Guidelines

Consider: (1) Spectral requirements (incandescent for full-spectrum, neon for specific wavelengths), (2) Environmental conditions (halogen for high-vibration areas), (3) Energy constraints (neon consumes less power), (4) Regulatory compliance (RoHS for mercury-free neon variants).

8. Industry Trends

Market shifts toward energy-efficient alternatives, but niche applications persist. Key trends include: (1) Development of hybrid incandescent-LED systems, (2) Neon lamps integrating smart control (IoT-enabled signage), (3) Phosphor-coated neons for tunable color outputs, (4) Regulatory phase-out of standard incandescents in 85+ countries by 2025.

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