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Faulty fluorescents

Pyewacket
15 years ago

I bought 4 fluorescent light fixtures at WalMart for seed starting.

Well lo and behold, one of them won't work at all straight out of the box, and another one keeps shutting itself off after a few minutes. I haven't had the heart to open the last two.

In the meantime, my seedlings have already sprouted, I don't have sufficient light for them, and they're already looking bad and leggy.

I can't find my receipt either.

This is ridiculous. I'm going to have to take a cab to the hardware store tomorrow just to buy fluorescents (no car).

I so hate Walmart. But due to lack of transportation, I bought these lights at WM because that's where I could get to.

Are my seedlings going to be salvageable? We don't even have the first leaflets showing, let alone true leaves.

Comments (9)

  • Karen Pease
    15 years ago

    In my experience, if you get leggy seedlings enough light, soon enough, they can recover. They'll never lose that initial leggy stem, though. You plant leggy broccoli, it'll end up a bit "L" shaped, with the initial leggy stem laying on the ground. :)

  • dan4279
    15 years ago

    I have had fluorescent fixtures that won't stay on. Sometimes they turn off after 5 minutes and sometimes after a couple hours. It's happened to me twice with different shop lights bought from different place (HD and Wal-Mart). Does anyone know why they turn off like that?

  • Pyewacket
    Original Author
    15 years ago

    Because they're cheap crap made in China?

    I don't know but it's VERY frustrating. Since I have my seed starting set up in a closet, I didn't know the thing was turning itself off for several days. (Timer works, lights don't).

    The only way to get them to come back on is to unplug them, take the bulbs out and put them back in, then plug them back in. The bulbs are seated, it's not that. The damn things just turn themselves off for no reason.

  • dan4279
    15 years ago

    That's exactly what mine did. Maybe someone who knows will chime in with an answer.

    What are you growing? My tomatoes went for about a week last year with my lights turning off. They were leggy, but I transplanted them deep and got them under lights that worked. They turned out okay. Good luck.

  • Pyewacket
    Original Author
    15 years ago

    Well I finally broke down and opened up the third shop light, and it seems to be working - so far. I should have done it before but having 2 in a row kind of depressed me and I just didn't want to think about it.

    I'm growing tomatoes, bell peppers, chili peppers, eggplant, shallots, lemongrass, several kinds of basil, some asian herbs, melons, green beans, peas, a slew of flowers, Korean cucumber, Korean radish, winged beans, scarlet runner beans, yardlong beans, coriander/cilantro, lettuce, spinach, bok choy, pak choy, some kind of Asian "lettuce". I've got about 8 or 10 different varieties of tomatoes and about that many different varieties of eggplant.

    I'm sure there's other stuff that escapes me right now, but that's what I can recall off the top of my head. I may end up having to buy bell pepper plants because I still don't have the seed I ordered from Pinetree Gardens. This is the first time they've stiffed me on something like this. Since it's past time to start that indoors even if they finally get around to sending me that it'll be too late for this year. I've got squash seed back ordered from them too that isn't here yet but at least there's a month or so to go before I have to plant that out.

    It's still pretty cold here even at the end of April. We have warm days but then it gets chilly again. I'm waiting til the end of May (90% chance that all danger of frost is past by then) to put out my warm weather starts (peppers, eggplant, maters). I'll go ahead and seed melons and things before that because if they get nipped I can replant, but I'm saving the transplants until I'm about as sure as I can be that the ground's thoroughly warmed up and they're not going to have Jack Frost nipping at their noses.

  • luke3026
    15 years ago

    I bought a T8 fixture at Walmart for $9 and it's been going for 2 months now with no problems. Mine wasn't made in China. It was Lights of America or something and was made in the US. I did make sure I picked one with a pristine box though as a few of them looked a bit banged up. Maybe I just got lucky. I got my other 3 fixtures from freecycle, so just needed to buy the one.

    Here is a link that might be useful: Luke's SF Victory Garden

  • Pyewacket
    Original Author
    15 years ago

    Yeah, sorry, but Lights of America products are made in China.

    The shop light in question (8045E) is ASSEMBLED in the US, from parts made in China.

    A lot of their stuff is flat out made in China.

    It's the ballast that's faulty and that was made in China.

  • luke3026
    15 years ago

    I guess I didn't look that closely at the label. They just worked so I didn't really see the need to poke around. I like them, especially since it's my only fixture that doesn't hum. My freecycle ones hum like crazy. Good thing they're tucked in the basement.

    Here is a link that might be useful: Luke's SF Victory Garden

  • xmaslightguy
    15 years ago

    >I have had fluorescent fixtures that won't stay on.
    >Sometimes they turn off after 5 minutes and sometimes
    >after a couple hours. It's happened to me twice with
    >different shop lights bought from different place (HD
    >and Wal-Mart). Does anyone know why they turn off like
    >that?

    Can't say about the 5 minutes...
    but if its after a half-hour or more, that sounds to me
    like the light's ballast is over-heating. As a safety
    feature, most (but not all) ballasts have a thermal
    protection circuit in them that will cut power if the
    unit overheats...those that do not have this (like the
    older Lights Of America shoplights) can go up in smoke
    (which believe me doesn't smell too nice)

    What might cause overheating?
    Are you using the right bulbs?
    (i'll assume 48" lights for this):
    a T-8 ballast should light any T-8 or T-12
    T-12 ballasts can be picky... standard T-12_40watt bulbs
    will always work fine, energy-saver T-12_34watt bulbs
    will cause overheating problems with many cheap shoplight
    ballasts, but will be ok with most commercial-grade lights
    (my advice is avoid energy-saver 34w T-12's altogether).
    T-8 bulbs in a T-12 light may or may_not work...its very
    much ballast dependent.

    How warm is the room (or plant enclosure)?
    heat ofcourse rises, so check the temp up high - near the
    lights...if its getting into the upper 90's or above, then
    you'll need a fan to cool the lights.

    How is the light mounted?
    ballasts can generate allot of heat... is the light mounted
    directly to a wood shelf (for example). That can block
    heat from escaping (of course the warmer the room, the more
    of an issue this is)

    ------------------------------
    For anyone who has lights that shut-down randomly...
    next time it happens (right afterwards), feel how warm the
    light-frame right where the ballast is mounted....but a
    word of warning be careful, it might be HOT!