
Carbon Fiber Halogen Quartz Lamps: The Industrial Heat You Can Rely On
Let’s talk about heat. The kind you need when the clock is ticking, the line is running, and there’s no room for warm-up delays. That’s exactly why we built these carbon fiber halogen quartz lamps. They’re made for the industrial floor—where you need heat that’s fast, controllable, and fits into tight spaces without a fuss.
Power That Gets Straight to Work
These lamps punch hard: 2500W and 400V, all packed into a 300mm quartz envelope. The payoff? High heat density and focused infrared output, exactly where you need it most. And because it runs at 400V, the current load is lower for the same wattage, which can ease the strain on your wiring. But here’s the catch—this kind of concentrated heat needs a proper cooling plan. Airflow, heat shielding, or a well-designed thermal setup in the machine. Plan for that, and you’re golden.
Built to Handle the Grind
Inside, you’ve got a carbon fiber filament living inside a halogen-filled quartz tube. The halogen cycle keeps the filament stable, so you don’t get that blackening effect that kills consistency over time. The quartz envelope handles rapid temperature swings without cracking under pressure, and it delivers a clean, predictable infrared output. For installation, we went with an R7s connector. It locks in at both ends, holds steady against vibration, and survives repeated maintenance without getting loose. That means you can swap the lamp quickly, without reworking the reflector or mounting hardware.
Where This Shines—And Why It Matters
You’ll see these lamps in places like PET blowing and plastic thermoforming, where you need heat that responds instantly and holds steady. The carbon fiber element heats up fast, so you spend less time waiting and more time producing. And because the design is compact with a standardized R7s interface, replacement is a straightforward drop-in. Less downtime. Less head-scratching. Just get the line back up and running. When you give this heater the cooling and thermal isolation it needs, it just keeps performing—cycle after cycle, without getting moody.