Hello,
Need to know what I have to do to change a 480 ballast in an outside parking lot light over to a 220 ballast?
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Hello,
Need to know what I have to do to change a 480 ballast in an outside parking lot light over to a 220 ballast?
If it's a multi-tap ballast there will be a lead for 240v and 208v. What is your voltage, and please don't say "220". There is no such thing.
I assume this is commercial, it will either be 240v(230v) or 208v.
Are you an electrician? Are you qualified and insured to do electrical work in a commercial setting?
Without knowing what type of light it is it is hard to give a good answer. Most likely you will need a ballast, starter, bulb and possibly socket and photocell. Really, if you are going to that bother, just change the whole fixture. At least then ALL the components are new. A ballast can be the major part of the unit cost unless the fixture is physically really big or fancy.
Edit: Stanfortyman is correct. I forgot about multi-tap ballasts. All the ones I work on are 120 volt and nothing above 250 watt.
The light in question is a shoe box style parking lot light on a 28' pole. Yes I would believe I would have to change to a 240 not 220 as I indicated before. So there may be a chance that I may have a multi-tap ballast in the light? How much would I be looking at dollar wise to change these over?
Is it a HPS? Metal halide? Multi (mercury) vapor? What is the wattage? The parts are not interchangeable for the different types of bulbs. Even different wattages require different ballasts. And different ballasts for the same bulb can require different external parts. Some ballasts have optional capacitors, which you should use. The original fixture may not have provision to mount things other than exactly what was in it originally. Without knowing the light type and where you are, pricing will be difficult. You will have to go to a real electrical supply house to get these kind of parts. If you don't know exactly what you are doing you could get yourself into a heap of trouble.
Edit: after posting this I saw your post about the mercury vapor type. Are you certain about that? Metal halide looks almost the same. I am not familiar with mercury vapor shoebox fixtures, but I am with metal halide.
EPM
Before you spend more money, go check if they have multi-tap ballasts. If they are new, (something I did not know before now) you should be able to read lettering and labels on the ballast and wiring. Otherwise, look them up on the manufacturers website. Once you get the unit specs or see a ballast schematic, you will be able to figure it out easily.
EPM
Like I said, IF they are multi-tap there will be a separate lead for each voltage. The ones that are not used are simply capped off.
If all you have is a "com" and "480v" leads then they are not multi-tap tap.
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