Photo Gallery

RLOD#31 (2020.06.10) 1968 Philips HP175W RQ1034/32

The 175 W high-pressure mercury lamp was first introduced in the USA during the second half of the 1950s as a source of intermediate output between those of the 100 and 250 W mercury lamps. In Europe, Philips began developing this lamp type a decade later and released it as the HPL-N 175W in 1969, followed by a clear version, the HP 175W in 1970. The lamp shown here is an early development model featuring a 250 W burner with a mercury dosage adjusted for the lower power dissipation. Its operating vapor pressure becomes unsaturated at 4.37 atm when the dissipated power reaches 175 W exactly. The lamp’s electrical characteristics stabilize at this power level when driven from 220-V 50-Hz mains with a 82-Ω series inductor ballast, i.e., the impedance of Philips’s #58247 AH/00 choke designed specifically for the HP(L-N) 175W.

While this approach to lamp design is certainly an economical one as it minimizes the tooling costs in production (all that is needed is a 10.8 % reduction in mercury dosage), the reduced arc power load of 27.6 W/cm (it is 39.4 W/cm at 250 W) critically decreases the initial lumen efficacy to 44 lm/W. For this reason Philips eventually designed an optimized 175 W arc tube for its commercial lamps. To that end the electrode gap length was shortened from 58 to 48 mm, the burner inner diameter was reduced from 14.5 to 13.0 mm, and the operating pressure was set to 4.75 atm. While the 175 W HP/HPL-N was available in Europe for twenty years, its usage remained extremely limited. Philips eventually delisted this wattage from their European catalogs in 1990 due to a lack of demand.


Keywords: Lamps

RLOD#31 (2020.06.10) 1968 Philips HP175W RQ1034/32


The 175 W high-pressure mercury lamp was first introduced in the USA during the second half of the 1950s as a source of intermediate output between those of the 100 and 250 W mercury lamps. In Europe, Philips began developing this lamp type a decade later and released it as the HPL-N 175W in 1969, followed by a clear version, the HP 175W in 1970. The lamp shown here is an early development model featuring a 250 W burner with a mercury dosage adjusted for the lower power dissipation. Its operating vapor pressure becomes unsaturated at 4.37 atm when the dissipated power reaches 175 W exactly. The lamp’s electrical characteristics stabilize at this power level when driven from 220-V 50-Hz mains with a 82-Ω series inductor ballast, i.e., the impedance of Philips’s #58247 AH/00 choke designed specifically for the HP(L-N) 175W.

While this approach to lamp design is certainly an economical one as it minimizes the tooling costs in production (all that is needed is a 10.8 % reduction in mercury dosage), the reduced arc power load of 27.6 W/cm (it is 39.4 W/cm at 250 W) critically decreases the initial lumen efficacy to 44 lm/W. For this reason Philips eventually designed an optimized 175 W arc tube for its commercial lamps. To that end the electrode gap length was shortened from 58 to 48 mm, the burner inner diameter was reduced from 14.5 to 13.0 mm, and the operating pressure was set to 4.75 atm. While the 175 W HP/HPL-N was available in Europe for twenty years, its usage remained extremely limited. Philips eventually delisted this wattage from their European catalogs in 1990 due to a lack of demand.

2020-06-15_Sylvania_SHP_352170W.jpg 2020-06-14_Tungsram_HgMIF_25021D.jpg 2020-06-10_Philips_HP_175W_RQ10342132.jpg 2020-06-08_Philips_DL3521745.jpg 2020-06-07_Philips_HPV02_60W.jpg
Lamp/Fixture Information
Manufacturer:Philips
Model Reference:HP175W RQ1034/32
Lamp
Lamp Type:Mercury high pressure
Filament/Radiator Type:Thermal discharge in argon and mercury vapor
Base:E40
Shape/Finish:Ellipsoidal clear
Burning Position:Universal
Electrical
Wattage:175 W
Voltage:132 V
Current:1.49 A
Optical
Lumen Output:7,700 lm
Lumen Efficacy:44.0 lm/W
Colour Temperature:5800 K
Colour Rendering Index:16 Ra8
Physical/Production
Dimensions:226L x 90Ø mm
Factory Location:Eindhoven, the Netherlands
Fabrication Date:1968
Application/Use:Testing and characterization (intention: general utilitarian lighting)
File information
Filename:2020-06-10_Philips_HP_175W_RQ10342132.jpg
Album name:Max / Random lamp of the day
Keywords:Lamps
Filesize:282 KiB
Date added:11 Jan 2026
Dimensions:1200 x 800 pixels
Displayed:312 times
URL:https://trad-lighting.net/gallery/displayimage.php?pid=1085
Favourites:Add to Favourites

Comment 1 to 4 of 4
Page: 1

Ria   [Sun 11 Jan 2026 at 20:32]
Interesting that the 175W rating was never common over here Wonder
Max   [Mon 12 Jan 2026 at 16:01]
Probably because it's too close to our common 125 W lamps. I'm wondering what triggered Philips and other European lamp manufacturers to develop and release 175 W mercury lamps of their own... it made sense in North America given the large gap in output between 100 and 250 W lamps (3.3 and 11.0 klm in the mid 1950s), but here that was not so (125 W = 5.4 klm and 250 W = 11.5 klm in the mid 1960s).
Ria   [Mon 12 Jan 2026 at 16:54]
That makes sense, thanks Max Bulb Man
Max   [Mon 12 Jan 2026 at 21:58]
No problem, Ria!

Comment 1 to 4 of 4
Page: 1