
The Specs That Actually Make Sense on the Floor
Here’s the deal: we built this 650mm, 240V, 1200W quartz halogen heating lamp for the places where space is tight and you need serious heat, fast. The length gives you a big radiating surface without eating up precious room in your machine. And the 1200W? It delivers steady, focused power so you can hit the heat you need, right where you need it. Running on 240V isn’t just a random choice—it makes wiring cleaner in most plant setups. Fewer transformers. Less clutter in the control cabinet. It keeps the current lower than some alternatives, which helps, but let’s be real: you still need a circuit that’s properly rated, solid terminations, and good thermal management around the lamp. Plan for that, and life gets easier.
Built to Take the Punishment
The quartz envelope handles heat like a champ and shrugs off thermal shock. That means it can cycle on and off without cracking, even when you’re running typical industrial duty cycles. Inside, the halogen gas does its quiet work, helping keep the filament stable by sending evaporated material back where it belongs. The payoff? Consistent output over the life of the lamp. And the R7s base? It’s a straight-up, no-fuss connection. It locks the lamp in place and lines up the contacts every single time. Installation is a quick drop-in, and you’re not fighting to keep the lamp aligned inside the reflector or housing.
Where It Shines—And How to Keep It Honest
This is your go-to when you need fast, focused infrared heat: plastic forming, drying components, curing adhesives—those kinds of processes. The length, power, and voltage work together so the heat spreads predictably. That makes it easier to dial in your settings and repeat them, shift after shift. Now, this lamp brings the heat—literally. It runs hot, in a concentrated spot, so make sure the fixture, wiring, and anything nearby can take the temperature. Give it proper shielding and ventilation, and you’ll keep the whole system reliable. Do that, and you won’t be chasing premature failures when you’ve got work to do.