by ericmark »
Tue Oct 25, 2011 4:52 pm
I would not normally use a dimmer for quartz lamps. There are of course exceptions where for some reason one has to except the shortened lamp life but in the main a standard switch is better.
Although you can get powerful dimming switches they tend to be very expensive and of course lamps do blow so the dimmer really needs to work from a single bulb to all bulbs and as far as I can see all the very powerful dimming switches will be damaged if under loaded and well as overloaded.
There is also a problem with heat. 500W is a fair amount of heat and the room would need thermostatic radiator valves or the like to compensate for the heat from bulbs. If the main thermostat was in that room switching on lights would mean rest of house would get cold.
Reducing the lamp sizes will help with heat problem.
Personally I find the 50mm spot lights are great for when a spot is required. For example as a bedside lamp shinning directly on my book, lighting a picture on the wall, or an area well away from the light source where normal lights would not reach. However for general lighting they are rubbish.
People refer to them as mood lighting but really you only what that as an extra for when the mood suits not as only lighting. By moving to a plain switch it opens up the options to use other types of lighting. It does not really matter if you fit cold cathode lamps into existing GU10 holders or if you swap fitting and replace at least some lamps with for example 2D light fittings until the dimmer is got rid of you can't use them.
I replaced all my fittings in living room and dinning room with CFU's which take some time to reach full brightness so even without a dimmer we still get a soft start. So they do not wake my wife if she falls asleep in chair when I switch on the lights.
Most houses some where have ceiling roses which are used as junction boxes and rated at 5/6A so the consumer unit will likely have a 5A fuse or 6A MCB so with one room using 2A there is a good chance from time to time the 5/6A is exceeded plunging you into darkness so I would be looking at a method to reduce the power going to your lamps.