stage lights & bulbs

hdphilie

Member
I am a band director in our public school system. As of this year, I am in a newly created Auditorium Manager position. This position was created mainly because of scheduling nightmares that had been occuring. I have been running the lights and sound for our school's concerts for the past 17 years, but I know just the very basics and enought to make things work for the concerts - nothing fancy. I can set up our sound equipment and patch in lights to the board. Though, if things go wrong with the equipment, I have to contact our technology coordinator and hope he can/will fix them.

Our lighting equipment (including the board) is old, but they work. How do I know what kind/style of stage lights we have? How do I know which bulbs are supposed to be used in those lights? A custodian has changed the bulbs in the past, but when I went to change some bulbs last month, the old bulbs had bubbled in the fixtures to the point where they had created a hole in the bulb and then the glass section of the bulb just pulled out of the base, leaving the base in the socket. One of the bulbs had actually exploded in the light fixture. The custodian came to help me at this point, and the new bulbs he put in the fixtures seemed awfully big for those fixtures. He said they were the bulbs he always used for those lights. How do I know if we are really using the right bulbs? I need to order some new bulbs, but I don't want to order the wrong ones just because "they're what we've always used". All I really have to go off of is his word - no one else on staff knows anything about the lights, and we have no manuals around.

ANY suggestions you would have for me would be greatly appreciated.
 
Do your lights look like one of the two pictures below?
 

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We definitely have a few that look like the first picture. We used bulbs that look like car headlights for those. I think the others look like the second picture, only MUCH older.
 
We definitely have a few that look like the first picture. We used bulbs that look like car headlights for those. I think the others look like the second picture, only MUCH older.

The "headlight instruments" should look like this:

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Does it look like this? If so it's called a PAR can, they come in varying sizes.

Here is another picture of the second instrument:

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This is a fresnel, it has the ridged lens.
 
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Going to the picture of Charcoaldabs post of the Par Can... They have no glass lens. They are essentially a holder for a large headlight. On the back there is a handle that you can turn to rotate the oval shape of the light.

Yeah are there any brand names or markings of any sort. Also how about a picture of an old lamp. We can do wonders around here with a few pictures.

Where are you at? Maybe someone around here lives near you and can help.
 
Going to the picture of Charcoaldabs post of the Par Can... They have no glass lens. They are essentially a holder for a large headlight. On the back there is a handle that you can turn to rotate the oval shape of the light.
Yeah are there any brand names or markings of any sort. Also how about a picture of an old lamp. We can do wonders around here with a few pictures.
Where are you at? Maybe someone around here lives near you and can help.

Whoa! Hold up, where is this handle you speak of on the par cans? Wow, after coming to these boards I realized two things. 1. I know nothing at all. 2. My school could teach us more.
 
Whoa! Hold up, where is this handle you speak of on the par cans? Wow, after coming to these boards I realized two things. 1. I know nothing at all. 2. My school could teach us more.

No problem bud. You are doing exactly what we hope everyone will do around here. Help when you can and ask questions when you don't have a clue. Par lamps project an oval shaped beam. On the outside back of a PAR there is a little recessed handle which you can turn to rotate the entire socket and change the look of the pool of light. On a S4 PAR they made a rotating ring out by the lens that allows you to spin the lens instead of the lamp.
 
I'll take a look at our pars when I get a chance. I haven't noticed any handles... yet. Thanks.
 
Sorry have to admit I haven't used a lot of old style PARs, mostly the S4's... I know I'm spoiled. The one's I've used in the past have always had a little handle recessed inside the back of the can attached to the back of the socket. The ones you have may not have a handle but I'm sure they have a reasonable way to rotate the lamp without burning your fingers.
 
Nope if it's a good old fashioned Par can the only way to move the bottle is to reach in the back grab the ceramic base and spin.

'Course when you've been in the biz as long as I have, you have no feeling left in the fingertips of your left hand so you don't needno stinking handle !

:mrgreen: :mrgreen:
<tongue thoroughly planted in cheek>
 
Well there you go. But either way, handle or not, reach in the back and twist.
 
Back to the original post...
If you can:

-Measure the over all length of anything that looks like the first picture I posted and has lenses in the front of it.

-Measure the lens diameter of any stubby instruments with lenses that have "rings" (like the second picture I posted). The answer is likely either 6" or 8".

-Measure the outside length and diameter of any instruments that hold the "headlight" lamps.

That combined with pictures... and any sort of writing or coding you find... should help us dial in on exactly what you have.
 
It’s called finger Fu@&ing. Where the oil from one’s skin touches the lamp and it caused the halogen effect to improperly cool by way of heat reflected off the oil coated surface. Bad thing to see, once did in an entire theater’s inventory this way myself early on no doubt in a similar era of understanding what the heck I was doing beyond functioning. Still have some of them bubbled lamps, at times the filament would stretch as if blown towards the bubble to the point that the filament itself would encase itself within the glass. It would still work even if surrounded by the glass outer bulb. This until at least it finally had a blow out.

This all as opposed to real blow outs where the filament possibly due to a voltage spike while already operating at times will shoot thru the outside wall of the glass in the glass having like a bullet effect worth of hole frozen in it, and the opposing side of the lamp having a puckered like appearance due to the gasses sucked out of the lamp.

This also as opposed to the bloated lamp where someone did a really good job of touching the lamp and there is a huge bubble blown up all over the globe as if balloon. Such lamps often have a silver coloring to them due to the deposits from the filament finding the outer globe of the lamp hotter than the filament at some point before it also fails.

Love lamp failure science, at times at work, it’s as if I am the CSI of lamps - who did what. This especially for metal hallide type lamps. This past weekend I had a HSR 575/72 lamp that had something like 4,950 hours on a lamp rated for 750. Sent the “looks brown” lamp back for another play test, why stop now, let’s at least take it up to 5,000 hours before replacing it. Next lamp by chance had over 9,500 hours on it... Took a look at the amount of bubbling and wear to the electrodes, yep, this lamp has been in service for about 40 hours in reality, but we have a new world’s record in a lamp I now have no chance of returning to the manufacturer due to also being “brown” in look to it but our not re-setting the lamp life counter on lamps changed in this fixture. Hmm, over 9,000 hours... that means at least the last 12 lamps installed in this fixture have not had the lamp counter on the moving light reset. I tack the fixture serial number and know who the idiots “professional lighting technicians” are that don’t know how to re-set a lamp counter...

Anyway, lamps doing odd looking things like getting bubbles are often from people touching the lamp. Sections of the filament that fall off a hanger or in having a broken hanger kind of fall off and go off free hanging or at an angle in also at times touching the globe often comes from rough handling of the fixture.

Be sure and examine the lamps and fixture sockets each time a lamp is changed - look for arching and corrosion as a tell tale sign of something that needs either re-surfacing - an advanced technique or replacement. Short of having a look at what went bad, you will burn thru what’s good in making it arch it’s way into being bad.

Get the gear including and especially beyond the lights also in need, specifically the dimmers and board in for a yearly service call like yesterday if you want to depend upon such things working tomorrow. Budget for doing this professionally yearly or you need to start budgeting for new equipment instead at a higher cost immediately.

Start studying for your new trade. Lots of good books out there and good past posts here and say on Stagecraft to read. You are responsible now for the gear it would seem, time for you to be responsible for it and not rely on anyone other than leg work for assisting you. This much less maintaining it to your new acquired studies in standards for the gear. Could be this technology coordinator is doing a perfectly fine job, could be and often is otherwise. You need to know the difference. Perhaps take a course at the local college or junior college in stage lighting to supplement other studies of it. Gotta master beyond being able to function as it’s your responsibility this lineage and supervision.

Each fixture if produced after like 1960 will have as if your coffee pot a stamp on it that lists it’s rated wattage, voltage, manufacturer and model. That’s a good start. Take a list, heck, pull down all the gear do a cleaning and service call, figure out what needs attention and do a good inventory. When is for instance the last time the bolts on the C-Clamps have been oiled?

IN knowing what’s the right bulbs (Lamps - bulbs grow in the ground or describe the shape of the glass on a lamp), you have to know what fixtures you have. AT times, a lamp will be larger, at other times say a hole in a reflector is not sized for the lamp installed and say if closer than 1/16" to the reflector, it’s not the correct lamp or you need to modify the reflector. Another factor is bench focus - that state when the lamp is correctly centered optically within the reflector and lens system. A lamp too close to a reflector could also not cool properly and cause a bubble or blow out if not explosion if torqued against the reflector. Gotta do a bench focus where possible each time with older fixtures, this if not at least a rough sighting of where the lamp is sitting in the fixture by way of inspection after installed.

Lots of causes for what you have observed so far, you are the person on site. It’s going to take some leg work and lots of study to gain control of what you now are responsible for. Enjoy and live this time where you will learn ever so much. Ask lots of questions also.
 

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