kcollinsdesign
Old member
We have been having problems with LED corncobs failing. These are usually for large cabinet signs that were designed for HID lamps. These lamps are installed correctly, with adequate ventilation, exceeding manufacturer's recommendation for the amount of air (envelope) around each lamp. Sometimes they just need to be tightened (again they were installed correctly - the design of the base is different, of course, from the original HIDs with a hard metal contactor at the base of the lamp instead of the soft metal on HID lamps, but usually they just stop working. All wiring is to spec, power supplies working properly, and voltage at the socket is well within spec.
This is more of a nuisance with signs that have easy access (the manufacturer usually provides a five year warranty), but beomes a major expense when the sign is 75' - 130' in the air (highway signs), that you have to jump into and often rent equipment to reach.
Does anyone have any recommendation for reliable LED corncobs that can be screwed securely into sockets and will last at least five years? The current job has failed corncobs (400w HID replacements) and the owner is sick of paying several thousand dollars each time they need to replace faulty lamps. He replaced lamps (once again) just a few months ago, and they are already starting to fail. The client wants a five year parts and labor warranty, and is willing to pay for premium lamps and whatever it takes to stop bleeding money.
Like I said, this is not a one-off problem. I have been seeing this since the corncobs came out.
This is more of a nuisance with signs that have easy access (the manufacturer usually provides a five year warranty), but beomes a major expense when the sign is 75' - 130' in the air (highway signs), that you have to jump into and often rent equipment to reach.
Does anyone have any recommendation for reliable LED corncobs that can be screwed securely into sockets and will last at least five years? The current job has failed corncobs (400w HID replacements) and the owner is sick of paying several thousand dollars each time they need to replace faulty lamps. He replaced lamps (once again) just a few months ago, and they are already starting to fail. The client wants a five year parts and labor warranty, and is willing to pay for premium lamps and whatever it takes to stop bleeding money.
Like I said, this is not a one-off problem. I have been seeing this since the corncobs came out.