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1973 Philips 7389 (500 W / 240 V)

Introduced in the early 1970s, the Philips model 7389 is a 500 W tungsten-halogen lamp designed to replace sealed-beam lamps in PAR can luminaires (with the addition of a parabolic mirror). To that end the lamp has a very compact construction featuring a GY9.5 base and a precisely aligned monoplane filament. The quartz bulb is filled with argon, nitrogen, and dibromomethane, a recipe which was developed at Philips during the second half of the 1960s and which enabled lamps of the present kind. The tungsten filament is operated at a very high temperature so as to realize a high source brightness and output. The latter is 45 % greater (14.5 vs. 10.0 klm) than that of standard half-kilowatt stage halogen lamps, resulting in an high lumen efficacy of 29 lm/W. The drawback, however, is a service life limited to 50 h only, which is sufficient for the intended application of effect lighting in studio, theatre, and disco settings. Philips released three lamps rated from 500 to 800 W for that particular application, with the present 7389 model being the most efficient.


Keywords: Lamps

1973 Philips 7389 (500 W / 240 V)


Introduced in the early 1970s, the Philips model 7389 is a 500 W tungsten-halogen lamp designed to replace sealed-beam lamps in PAR can luminaires (with the addition of a parabolic mirror). To that end the lamp has a very compact construction featuring a GY9.5 base and a precisely aligned monoplane filament. The quartz bulb is filled with argon, nitrogen, and dibromomethane, a recipe which was developed at Philips during the second half of the 1960s and which enabled lamps of the present kind. The tungsten filament is operated at a very high temperature so as to realize a high source brightness and output. The latter is 45 % greater (14.5 vs. 10.0 klm) than that of standard half-kilowatt stage halogen lamps, resulting in an high lumen efficacy of 29 lm/W. The drawback, however, is a service life limited to 50 h only, which is sufficient for the intended application of effect lighting in studio, theatre, and disco settings. Philips released three lamps rated from 500 to 800 W for that particular application, with the present 7389 model being the most efficient.

_DSC2776m.jpg _DSC2788m.jpg Philips_7389_500W_240V_-_NL_1973.jpg Philips_SN21T_250W_BU_-_NL_m1970s_a.jpg Railway_Signals.jpg
Lamp/Fixture Information
Manufacturer:Philips
Model Reference:7389
Lamp
Lamp Type:Tungsten halogen
Filament/Radiator Type:Incandescent tungsten filament
File information
Filename:Philips_7389_500W_240V_-_NL_1973.jpg
Album name:Max / Incandescent lamps
Keywords:Lamps
Filesize:432 KiB
Date added:Sep 08, 2024
Dimensions:1200 x 604 pixels
Displayed:9 times
DateTime Original:2013:12:16 01:17:55
Exposure Time:1/30 sec
FNumber:f/8
Flash:No Flash
Focal length:75 mm
ISO:1000
Model:Canon EOS 6D
Software:Adobe Photoshop CS5 Windows
White Balance:1
URL:https://trad-lighting.net/gallery/displayimage.php?pid=489
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Comment 1 to 2 of 2
Page: 1

Sammi   [Sep 08, 2024 at 02:53 PM]
Is it my imagination, or is one pin slightly larger than the other.? Wonder
Max   [Sep 08, 2024 at 08:31 PM]
It's not your imagination, the pins of the GY9.5 base have different sizes indeed.

Comment 1 to 2 of 2
Page: 1