REPLACING A LOW VOLTAGE MULTI-SPOT TRACK
Posted: Thu Jun 19, 2008 12:58 am
As a newbie, I read with interest the often negative remarks about LV fittings. It was helpful [though I'm committed in my property to over 40 of them!] Anyway my question concerns a very attractive contemporary design lighting track that is fixed to the kitchen ceiling above an island unit.
The track comprises [i] a track with two strips of metal about 2 metres long separated by plastic [this track carries the 12v supply]; [ii] ceiling fittings into which the track clips and allow it to be installed as an attractive elongated S-shape over the island unit; [iii] 4 fasten-on downlighter fittings which are rated to take standard 35w LV halogen lamps; [iv] a metal finished cylindrical casing screwing to a ceiling plate; two metal fittings emerge at the bottom of the casing to deliver 12v across the rails; inside the casing is heavy fused square transformer rated at max 150 VA which has 4 screws which offer up through the transformer and hold it to the ceiling plate.
This has been an attractive design idea that has worked well for 7 years [couple of fuses went, that's all]. Now however the transformer appears to have gone kaput and a plastic thread fitting has failed [possibly due to heat]. The product by Eglo is obsolete, no spares [isn't this always the case?] and we have searched extensively without finding a similar product with good design.
Sorry for all the detail. My query: As the fitting carries a load of 4 x 35w = 140w, is there any way in which I can dispense with the Orientronic transformer that weighs in at 2kg [!] and simply use one or more lightweight transformers to deliver the power that could sit above near the joist to which the ceiling plate is attached. I'm not sure how to do he necessary calculations but it seems as if I'm dealing with a fitting equivalent to < 2.5 standard downlighters and maybe it can be dealth with similarly and without the heavy transformer. I've looked for its replacement but that has been a blind alley.
I hope no bright spark will suggest a 240v pendant as the style fanatic to whom I am married [currently, high voltage!] won't tolerate anything she considers naff. It's not the £200 we spent on the original fitting, we simply can't find anything comparable.
Hope you guys can help technically and make sure I don't burn down the house trying to save this fitting.
The track comprises [i] a track with two strips of metal about 2 metres long separated by plastic [this track carries the 12v supply]; [ii] ceiling fittings into which the track clips and allow it to be installed as an attractive elongated S-shape over the island unit; [iii] 4 fasten-on downlighter fittings which are rated to take standard 35w LV halogen lamps; [iv] a metal finished cylindrical casing screwing to a ceiling plate; two metal fittings emerge at the bottom of the casing to deliver 12v across the rails; inside the casing is heavy fused square transformer rated at max 150 VA which has 4 screws which offer up through the transformer and hold it to the ceiling plate.
This has been an attractive design idea that has worked well for 7 years [couple of fuses went, that's all]. Now however the transformer appears to have gone kaput and a plastic thread fitting has failed [possibly due to heat]. The product by Eglo is obsolete, no spares [isn't this always the case?] and we have searched extensively without finding a similar product with good design.
Sorry for all the detail. My query: As the fitting carries a load of 4 x 35w = 140w, is there any way in which I can dispense with the Orientronic transformer that weighs in at 2kg [!] and simply use one or more lightweight transformers to deliver the power that could sit above near the joist to which the ceiling plate is attached. I'm not sure how to do he necessary calculations but it seems as if I'm dealing with a fitting equivalent to < 2.5 standard downlighters and maybe it can be dealth with similarly and without the heavy transformer. I've looked for its replacement but that has been a blind alley.
I hope no bright spark will suggest a 240v pendant as the style fanatic to whom I am married [currently, high voltage!] won't tolerate anything she considers naff. It's not the £200 we spent on the original fitting, we simply can't find anything comparable.
Hope you guys can help technically and make sure I don't burn down the house trying to save this fitting.