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  • Author Author: shabaz
  • Date Created: 7 Oct 2018 12:22 AM Date Created
  • Views 2565 views
  • Likes 17 likes
  • Comments 18 comments
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  • philips_lumileds
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  • teardown

Philips MASTER LEDspot Teardown

shabaz
shabaz
7 Oct 2018

Introduction

I recently ordered various LED home lighting from a UK supplier (theledspecialist.co.uk), and unfortunately one arrived smashed : ( They kindly sent a replacement very quickly, but before I threw out the damaged one, I couldn't resist a teardown : )

 

Details
NamePhilips MAS LEDspot CLA D 9.5-75W 830 PAR30S 25D
EAN Code8718696713907
UPC Code929001342902

 

It is a 9.5W, 760 lumen LED bulb, warm white, with an Edison E27 fitting. It has a 25,000 hour life (longer than the usual 15,000 hour rating), intended for lobbies, walkways and so on according to the datasheet at the Philips Lighting website. As its name suggests, the beam is fairly tight (about 25 degrees overall). I'm using it in the workshop as some temporary lighting (it replaced a bulb that I needed elsewhere, and I was curious to find out what this new-ish model Philips bulb was like!).

 

Teardown

Opening the box, I saw the bulb was smashed : ( Rarely for an LED bulb, it actually has a lot of glass! Definitely not one to drop! Despite all the glass that front lens is plastic, and there are more detailed photos further below.

image

The glass body is extremely thick (about 4mm). I couldn't understand why there was so much glass used, but I'm wondering if it was needed for producing the inner mirror reflective surface, or for strength. Perhaps the inner surface is intended to reflect out heat as well as lots of light. The inner surface was extremely reflective, just like a first-surface optical mirror, but with the dimple pattern that you can see from the outside in the photo below (and in some of the fragments in photos further below). I get the feeling that the entire enclosure forms a large part of the cost of this lamp!

image

The front lens was quite interesting. I could not guess what plastic, it could be polycarbonate or something more exotic, since it needs to withstand heat and be highly transparent. But the part was stunning. It is extremely intricate.

image

Here's a side view. It looks like a fairly complex shape!

image

Inside the bulb, the LED was mounted on an metal-core PCB (MCPCB), held in place by a clip (removed for the photo below). The connecting wires appear to have a silicone-like insulation, and there is heat-proof sheathing around that too, where the cable passes through to the other side of the aluminium heatsink.

 

I could not identify the LED manufacturer, I'd initially assumed it was a Lumileds part, but it is not a shape that I could see in their online catalog. The heatsink is actually not that thick! Given the shape of it, and how it is attached at its sides to the glass, I'm wondering if the glass plays a role in the heat sinking too. The LED is clearly very efficient though, just from the sums - the bulb offers 760 lumens at 9.5W, so even at 85% efficiency from the driver, that's close to 95 lumens per watt, and it could be higher still. I'm tempted to do further measurements : ) but there are plenty other projects to do too image

image

The circuitry was potted, but it didn't look overly crushed together; the E27 fitting shape has more than enough room for this circuit. It looks about the level of quality to be expected I think, not bad at all. There are a few inductors, and a MOSFET in an unusual package (i.e. small!) next to the yellow square inductor.

image

The underside contained more semiconductors. The main IC is iW3689 from Dialog Semiconductor (PDF brief datasheet).

image

The brief datasheet circuit looks similar to the implementation on the circuit board, although I didn't inspect closely.

image

Summary

I was quite impressed at the design of this LED bulb. It's definitely a more involved design than I would have expected! By the way its un-smashed sibling has a nice warm-white and powerful light output too, as expected.

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Top Comments

  • 14rhb
    14rhb over 7 years ago +5
    Hi Shabaz, It is always good to see what is inside things, and you seem to constantly deliver on that for E14 - thank you. The PCB does look well made and populated, which is good to see. I doubt some…
  • DAB
    DAB over 7 years ago +5
    One man's trash is another man's opportunity for adventure. It would be interesting to see what the IR emission is compared to the visible light emission. Was there a spectral plot in the datasheet for…
  • shabaz
    shabaz over 7 years ago in reply to 14rhb +5
    Hi Rod, Thanks! You're right, it looks great. I believe that LED lighting is an interesting challenge for manufacturers, even moving from one fitting to another could change the design a lot. Unfortunately…
  • shabaz
    shabaz over 7 years ago in reply to Fred27

    Hi David,

     

    That's a cool teardown : ) The Hue range looks super interesting. From your teardown, I see Philips did the same trick, hiding the IC underneath the capacitor : ) The things manufacturers have to do to squeeze it all into a lightbulb form-factor : )

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  • Fred27
    Fred27 over 7 years ago

    I nice teardown and analysis. I did something similar on their ZigBee controlled Hue bulbs a while ago - but more to see if they could be repurposed to control different lights.

    https://0xfred.wordpress.com/2017/01/01/philips-hue-lbw010-teardown/

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  • shabaz
    shabaz over 7 years ago in reply to jc2048

    Good point!! It could well be due to some legal requirements in countries.

    I also liked that the inside was highly reflective with dimples and was wondering if maybe the glass is cheaper to mirror-ize than to machine and polish aluminium with such a shape.

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  • jc2048
    jc2048 over 7 years ago in reply to shabaz

    I always get confused by the safety stuff, but external metal either needs to be earth bonded, which you can't do if you don't have an earth, or double insulated, which partially defeats the purpose if you have a couple of layers of insulating plastic in there. I suspect the advantage of the glass is that there's probably an exemption in the safety rules because of its historical use in tungstun lamps, so maybe Philips can argue that a single layer of glass meets the rules because this item is defined as being in the same class as traditional light bulbs.

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  • mcb1
    mcb1 over 7 years ago in reply to shabaz

    since the small bit of heat could be nice nearby

    Not much heat from them as they aren't on long enough ... image

     

    When I built the house it was with my shiftwork in mind so stumbling around at 5am in total darkness was not an option, hence the 10 deg version.

     

    The beam width problem showed up when my Australian friend wanted to add some work lights over the area his wife was using.

    All we could find were 65 deg options and it simply wasn't going to work for her (issues with glare and light from the side).

     

    And this was when Australia decided that incandescent lamps were evil and to be exterminated, but they realised that there was no a LED replacement for every lamp.

     

    Mark

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