Turning lightbulbs on and off makes it blow faster False or true?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the claim that turning lightbulbs on and off can cause them to burn out faster. Participants explore the mechanisms behind lightbulb failure, particularly focusing on the behavior of the tungsten filament and the effects of temperature changes and electrical surges.

Discussion Character

  • Debate/contested
  • Technical explanation
  • Exploratory

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants suggest that the tungsten filament wears out due to heat and vaporization, questioning how turning the light on and off could accelerate this process.
  • Others argue that the immediate surge of electricity when turning the light on causes vibrations in the filament, which may lead to breakage over time.
  • A participant mentions that the idea of turning lights on and off harming them is an "old wives tale," but acknowledges that neon lights may be affected differently.
  • Some express skepticism about the "old wives tale" characterization, proposing that repeated expansion and contraction of the filament could create stress fractures, potentially leading to earlier burnout.
  • One participant notes that the electric resistance of the filament varies significantly with temperature, suggesting that this could influence the current and heating process when the light is turned on and off.
  • Another participant emphasizes the need for controlled experiments to separate the effects of repetitive stress from those of rapid heating.
  • There are discussions about the audible vibrations of filaments, with some suggesting that the frequency of these vibrations could be high, while others clarify that the AC frequency in the US is not ultrasonic.
  • Some participants share personal anecdotes about lightbulb failures in specific situations, such as using dimmer switches.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants do not reach a consensus on whether turning lightbulbs on and off causes them to burn out faster. Multiple competing views remain, with some supporting the idea and others challenging it.

Contextual Notes

Participants highlight the complexity of the issue, including factors such as filament imperfections, variations in heat and magnetic fields, and the influence of different types of electrical current (AC vs. DC). There are unresolved questions about the quantification of effects and the need for structured experiments.

naab
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When you were little you were always told not to "play" with light, by turning it on and off. This was because the light bulb would "blow up" faster..

But is this true?

I have learned that the tungsten filament in a light bulb wears up because of the heat that makes the tungsten "vaporize" slowly.. So I don't see how turning the light on and off would make it "blow up"/"burn over" faster...??

explain please.. is this myth true or busted? :P
 
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true

but not the 'right' reason---

turning the light 'on' causes a immediate surge that makes the filament vibrate/jump with the potential to break the more often it is 'turned on'
 
Except for the rather minor effect that rewebster mentioned, no. The idea that turning on an incandescent light "harms" it more than just having it on is an "old wives tale". It is, however, true that the ballast in neon lights are affected more by turning on the light than letting the light run.
 
I also thought it was an "old wives tale" haha..

Like taking a swim right after you have eaten..
 



watch at around 41 secs
 
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I'm not convinced that it's an "old wive's tale". I'd think that the repeated expansion and contraction of the filament would make stress fractures much more likely, making weak spots more likely to burn out. But I can't quantify how much of an effect that would be. Call the mythbusters!
 
They'll need to structure the experiment in such a way as to separate the repetive stress factor from the stress of rapid heating because it certainly is true that most general use incandescents fail when turned on.
 
Heey...! when you turn the light on the filament vibrates.. so maybe there is something about it after all:



around 40 secs...
 
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In our old house, we had a dimmer switch on the chandelier over the kitchen table and that fixture at light bulbs like candy. The power filtered through that dimmer was really "notchy" and if it was quiet in the house, you could hear the filaments humming as you dimmed the lights.
 
  • #10
turbo-1 said:
...you could hear the filaments humming as you dimmed the lights.


I think in that case, it was probably the contacts humming (arcing bulb to socket) from the AC current and resonating through the bulb.

--at some harmonic maybe too.
 
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  • #11
rewebster, I think so too... the filaments vibrate so rapidly so their hum would be almost ultrasound I think.. on the video you can barely see them shake and it's slowed down 40 times...
 
  • #12
OK naab---I have a thought WHY the filament 'vibrates/moves/shakes'---

--why do you think it does?
 
  • #13
Do the experiment.
Use a timer (or your old wife) for one bulb, and leave the other one on.
 
  • #14
I think it vibrates because of the moving electrons, but I'm not sure.. but you agree that the frequency of a possible sound from the filament would be high right.. so if you could hear the filament vibrate it would be a high pitch sound.. right?
 
  • #15
naab said:
I think it vibrates because of the moving electrons, but I'm not sure.. but you agree that the frequency of a possible sound from the filament would be high right.. so if you could hear the filament vibrate it would be a high pitch sound.. right?


I think from the frequency of the AC current adds a component (which MAY create a sound which MAY add another component), but a DC lightbulb's filament vibrate/jump/move when first turned on too...so...

do you have another thought?

(that was a big hint...)

------------------------------------------

OK--here's a bigger hint to what I think causes the movement


http://amasci.com/elect/poynt/voltagef.gif
 
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  • #16
I'm not familiar with DC and AC because I'm from Europe.. Is DC = and AC is the variable current? or the other way around..

please the answer to why it vibrates.. :P it's late, I can't think..
 
  • #17
The filament is not perfect and sets up variations in heat and magnetic fields along the length of the filament. As the wire first heats up and the magnetic field is initiated, variations in these two cause the filament to bend AND to attract/repel for a while setting up a movement/harmonic vibration/jerking/twisting motion. Some of the more expensive bulbs are longer lasting because the filaments are made with less imperfections in material and consistency in diameter/shape.
 
  • #18
I wish I was as smart as you.. how old are you? :D
 
  • #19
I wish I could say
I worked with Faraday.
 
  • #20
:P I just turned 18 last Thursday and I'm in my second year of high school out of three.. :D
you?
 
  • #21
Age doesn't matter ...



(that's what we older folk say)


just keep reading and asking questions
 
  • #22
:D I read/hear/watch physics almost every day, it's so addictive... I'm a total physics junkie :D
 
  • #23
Be The Lightbulb


------

but watch out for the imperfections
 
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  • #24
Yeah, but everytime I ask a question I turn on, and I might blow up someday if I ask too much :P

No.. If you ask a question you might feel stupid for 5 minutes, but if you don't ask, you might feel stupid your whole life..
 
  • #25
Well post another one of your questions then...


and find out what will happen.
 
  • #26
naab said:
rewebster, I think so too... the filaments vibrate so rapidly so their hum would be almost ultrasound I think.. on the video you can barely see them shake and it's slowed down 40 times...
No. AC in the US is at 60 cycles and if you use a dimmer to interrupt that the sine wave gets really notchy with a squared-off wave form. There is nothing ultrasonic about a 60 hz signal. One of the bars that I used to play guitar in produced a horrible buzz through our amps - it was the dimmer for the lights over the back bar.
 
  • #27
naab said:
When you were little you were always told not to "play" with light, by turning it on and off. This was because the light bulb would "blow up" faster..
But is this true?
Maybe there is another effect to consider, but I don't know if it's true.
We know that electric resistance of the filament varies a lot with temperature, specifically, it reduces much from room temperature to ~ 3000°K. So the electric current is higher when the filament is cold. Maybe the fact the filament doesn't heat up immediately, gives the current the time to reach high values and so to heat up, then, the filament to an higher temperature than at stationary conditions.
 
  • #28
Doc Al said:
I'm not convinced that it's an "old wive's tale". I'd think that the repeated expansion and contraction of the filament would make stress fractures much more likely, making weak spots more likely to burn out. But I can't quantify how much of an effect that would be. Call the mythbusters!

i am not either convinced it's a old wive's tale.

in fact, mostly for the reasons given, i am quite certain that a common incandescent light bulb that has the full voltage cycled on and off repeatedly (say being on 10 seconds, then off for ten seconds) will, more often than not, burnout earlier than an identical light bulb that has been left on the whole time.
 
  • #29
rbj said:
in fact, mostly for the reasons given, i am quite certain that a common incandescent light bulb that has the full voltage cycled on and off repeatedly (say being on 10 seconds, then off for ten seconds) will, more often than not, burnout earlier than an identical light bulb that has been left on the whole time.
Yes - there is a price to pay (duty-cycle) for on-again-off-again usage that is mitigated by continuous use. It's not just in light bulbs. If I was looking at a two-year old vehicle with 100K miles on it vs the same vehicle with 25K miles, I would really love to know who was driving those vehicles and under what circumstances. A person shuttling their kids back and forth to school/daycare and enduring stop and go traffic on their daily commute would kill a vehicle a whole lot quicker than someone who did a lot of long distance driving to get from job to job. I would WAY rather own a high-mileage used vehicle used by a salesman/tech service rep with a large territory than one owned by a soccer mom.
 
  • #30
I think Doc Al's reasoning is correct. Should be a relatively simple experiment to set up... on for 5 seconds... off for 5 seconds... repeat. If it really does have an effect on the life expectancy of a bulb, I think it'd be significant enough so that you'd get the bulbs to blow within an hour or so under such conditions.
 

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