| Lamp/Fixture Information |
| Manufacturer: | Osram |
| Model Reference: | HMI 12000W GS |
| Lamp |
| Lamp Type: | Metal halide short arc |
| Filament/Radiator Type: | Highly loaded arc in argon, mercury and metal halides (Dy, Gd, Cs) |
| Base: | S30 |
| Shape/Finish: | Tubular with conical-ended clear burner |
| Service Life: | 500 h |
| Burning Position: | Horizontal ±15° |
| Electrical |
| Wattage: | 12 kW |
| Voltage: | 160 V |
| Current: | 83 A |
| Optical |
| Lumen Output: | 1150 klm |
| Lumen Efficacy: | 95.8 lm/W |
| Colour Temperature: | 6000 K |
| Colour Rendering Index: | 95 Ra8 |
| Physical/Production |
| Dimensions: | 460L x 65.5Ø mm |
| Factory Location: | Berlin Spandau, Germany |
| Fabrication Date: | Q1 2011 |
| Application/Use: | Outdoor stage lighting (daylight simulation) |
| File information |
| Filename: | 2020-06-20_Osram_HMI12000W21GS.jpg |
| Album name: | Max / Random lamp of the day |
| Keywords: | Lamps |
| Filesize: | 284 KiB |
| Date added: | 24 May 2026 |
| Dimensions: | 1200 x 800 pixels |
| Displayed: | 321 times |
| URL: | https://trad-lighting.net/gallery/displayimage.php?pid=1272 |
| Favourites: | Add to Favourites |
I've heard that these are used on movie sets to simulate moon light...
There's currently a listing on US eBay for the GE version of this lamp for $180.00.
Drew - Those arms need to be sandblasted in order to break the light pipe effect of the solid quartz rods, which would otherwise carry way too much optical energy to the lamp's extremities. That's an issue that resulted in the excessive oxidation of the electrical contacts in early HMI lamps. Now various methods are used to solve that problem beside sand blasting, like end seals with a pressed wavy pattern, double-pressed end seals with an intermediate gap, and dual end seals with a high-temperature graded-glass seal on the cap side of the arm. All very creative solutions! Of course, the most effective solution of all is the operation of the arctube in a neutral atmosphere. That's the key advantage of Philips's single-ended CSI, SN, and then MSR lamps.