Red_SXi
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Registered: 23rd Sep 02
Location: Dunstable Drives: 52 Plate BMW 3 M Sport Coupe
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Got a friend who wants me to do it.
Is it a simple job of running 1 wire with a switch to the battery, and then an earth wire to some bodywork/chassis ?
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Richie
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Registered: 3rd Dec 02
Location: Newport, Wales
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Are they LED tubes or glass?
If they are glass, you need to run a fused live to a switch from the battery, then from there to the neon transformer. Then you connect the ground wire of the transformer obviously to your earth.
Then connecting the neons works by daisy chaining. You take the one wire from the transformer to the first tube, then the other wire from that tube to the next tube, so basically making a loop, with the last wire going back into the transformer.
If they are LED's its a piece of piss lol
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sim0ng
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Registered: 13th Sep 04
Location: Rodborough, Gloucestershire
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wjy don't you run power to each undividually? that way theyre the same brightness alla way round and if 1 decides to die the rest will still stay lit up?
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Richie
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Registered: 3rd Dec 02
Location: Newport, Wales
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because this is the only way to wire up neon tubes? Its how they work?
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sim0ng
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Registered: 13th Sep 04
Location: Rodborough, Gloucestershire
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fair enough, i aint got any just makes more sence to do it my way tho, should write a letter asking why to people who make 'em! lol
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neoquip
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Registered: 12th Aug 02
Location: Nottm
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a single transformer neon kit will have 4 tubes and 9500v transformer.
this powers ALL the neons.... these kits are BRIGHTER than tubes that have built in transformers.
www.neoquip.com
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hitman2k
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Registered: 27th Aug 03
Location: West Midlands
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quote: Originally posted by neoquip
a single transformer neon kit will have 4 tubes and 9500v transformer.
this powers ALL the neons.... these kits are BRIGHTER than tubes that have built in transformers.
www.neoquip.com
i've seen some kits with 10,000 VOLT transformer!
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M2RTY
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Registered: 25th May 01
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quote: Originally posted by hitman2k
quote: Originally posted by neoquip
a single transformer neon kit will have 4 tubes and 9500v transformer.
this powers ALL the neons.... these kits are BRIGHTER than tubes that have built in transformers.
www.neoquip.com
i've seen some kits with 10,000 VOLT transformer!
wow, 500 more, nothing really
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hitman2k
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Registered: 27th Aug 03
Location: West Midlands
User status: Offline
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quote: Originally posted by M2RV H
quote: Originally posted by hitman2k
quote: Originally posted by neoquip
a single transformer neon kit will have 4 tubes and 9500v transformer.
this powers ALL the neons.... these kits are BRIGHTER than tubes that have built in transformers.
www.neoquip.com
i've seen some kits with 10,000 VOLT transformer!
wow, 500 more, nothing really
i know its 500 more been told there betta then 9500 thou i got mine from neoquip 9500 and there mint
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neoquip
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Registered: 12th Aug 02
Location: Nottm
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you wouldn't notice any difference... its a sales ploy.
your better with the longr tubes on ya car as it gives less 'blank' areas of light.
RED - Glow Job in a Box
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Richie
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Registered: 3rd Dec 02
Location: Newport, Wales
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can you answer why they are wired in series neoquip to clear it up?
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Houckham
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Registered: 29th May 03
Location: Newcastle upon Tyne
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prob somthing to do with the voltage drop accross each tube is enough to make all work perfectly withought last couple on chain being dull. plus a huge 9500V transformer helps with the voltage drop too. ...anyway. if it was parallel ther would be wires everywhere instead of simple one ring of wires.
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neoquip
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Registered: 12th Aug 02
Location: Nottm
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Houckham said it about right.
its a loop all the way round the car.. the Tranny has TWO wires from it... easist way to say is one is IN and the other is OUT.
But both give power out... so as it goes round the loop.. series.. it keeps the same power to all tubes.
easy way to test this is that if you un did the furthest wire between the NEON tubes... say.. near the back... you will still find all the tubes still lighing up but when you get to the last part of the tubes that ARN'T connected you will notice they are a bit dull as the powers not going all the way around... hence when they are all connected up.. in series.. they are all bright.
does that make sense? lol
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Richie
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Registered: 3rd Dec 02
Location: Newport, Wales
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its actually the reverse of physics though? If you were to use a circuit board and some bulbs, if you were to connect the bulbs in parallel, they would all be the same brightness. If you were to connect the bulbs in series, the chain would get dimmer the more bulbs you add. ect the 1st bulb would be the brightest, and the 4th would be the dimmest.
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Houckham
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Registered: 29th May 03
Location: Newcastle upon Tyne
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if it were a 9.5kV transformer.
there will be: generally a voltage drop of 2.3kV across each tube.
The tube spec will be to be at full brightness when the voltage across the tube is about 2kV - 2.5kV
This is why, when all 4 tubes are connected in series there is no "dimming" effect on any of the tubes, simply because there is more than enough voltage across the whole circuit to provide each tube with enough ummph.
hope this explains it a little better.
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Richie
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Registered: 3rd Dec 02
Location: Newport, Wales
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very clever explains it spot on.
A little more oomph to my knowledge
cheers
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neiliosxi
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Registered: 17th Dec 02
Location: Teesside (NE)Drives: Megane R26
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excellent diagram matey
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neoquip
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Registered: 12th Aug 02
Location: Nottm
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there very bright blue tubes!
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Houckham
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Registered: 29th May 03
Location: Newcastle upon Tyne
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cheers
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