*begin rant
Please keep replies on topic and start a different thread for discussion about covid etc..... thank you
Before anyone jumps to conclusions, yes I know these lamps can be replaced for cheap and there is no financial benefit to repairing them and I also know I can buy other types of lamp.
However I am not repairing them for these reasons I am just taking them apart to see how they work. Any repairs are just a bonus!
The reason I am doing this is that I am trying to fully understand how these capacitive drop LED lamps work for no other reason than knowledge. There is a lot of incorrect information on this topic and I am trying to filter that out and find the correct information.*end of rant
So I am obviously misunderstanding something still, maybe someone can help clear this all up?
Let me start by listing the faults with the dead lamps that I have taken apart so far, this information might help to work out what I am not understanding?
Out of 8 total 5W faulty lamps of different makes and types, 4 of them have failed dropper capacitors. 3 of which are class X capacitors which have no visible faults from the outside.
2 of the class X caps are dead shorts (8 ohm DC and 3 ohm DC) with blown fusible resistors and blown up black spot LEDs. I assume the LEDs killed the cap which took out the fuse?
The 3rd class X is open circuit. (which after replacing with a salvaged one, this lamp is now working fine and lighting my desk lamp.
) Is this a manufacturing defect in the cap?
The 4th lamp has an open circuit (not class X) film capacitor which has burned and bulged and oozed, there are no other faults in the lamp and it is working fine after changing this for a class X of the same value. Not sure what killed this one?
The other four lamps are all normal film capacitors (not class X) but the fault with all of these is one or two of LEDs have become open circuit and have a black spot. The capacitive dropper supply circuits are actually still working fine it is just the LEDs that have failed.
So far this is what I have found:
8/8 faulty LED lamps I have seen so far are capacitive drop power supplies (which I assume means it must be the cheapest/simplest solution).
4/8 lamps have open circuit LEDs as the reason for failure.
7/10 lamps use film capacitors that are not class X rated.
2/3 of the faulty class X capacitors are dead shorts, the other is open circuit completely (>200MΩ).
3/3 of the shorted capacitors caused a blown fusible resistor.
In the case of the three with blown fusible resistors, I would have assumed (like Zero999 said) that due to the capacitor becoming short, this would cause the fusible resistor to blow?
I would like to add that these are all lamps bought from Wickes or Tesco and not some dodgy online auction site that shall not be named.
The 2 main things I need clearing up are these:I am still not getting my head around is the fusible resistor malarkey. A previous poster said that the value doesn't matter however I don't think this is strictly true. Would one not use Ohms law and Watts law to calculate the value of the fusible resistor? And would there not be a trade off between either the resistor blowing at a lower current or the resistor wasting current as heat?
Additionally I am failing to understand the Class X capacitor fully. I have 2 out of 3 here that failed short circuit, but some people say they cannot, but they clearly can as I have seen first hand. I am very confused by this. Can anyone clear this up as to which conditions cause these to fail in this manner?
I appreciate all the advice that anyone here can all give on this subject.