
H11 6000K Halogen Replacement Bulbs: Infrared Heat, Built for the Grind
Look, if you’re running industrial heating, you need a heat source that shows up and does the work—without drama. That’s exactly what these H11 6000K halogen replacement bulbs are about. They slip in where a standard halogen used to live, but they’re built for the rough stuff. Think process heating that demands a tight, intense beam of heat right where you need it—so you can hit your thermal zone cleanly, without turning the whole area into a sauna.
Power, voltage, and size—kept simple
We set these bulbs up for high-voltage jobs, typically 400V, and you can spec them up to 2500W. The tube is 300mm long, so your heat footprint is predictable. No guesswork. You can size your hot zone with confidence. And that 6000K rating? It means shortwave output. In plain terms: the heat cuts straight through and hits the surface fast, instead of wasting energy warming the air. If you’re ramping up quickly on plastics, coatings, or sealing work, this is the kind of physics that makes the day go smoother.
What’s inside—and why it matters
The tube is made from high-purity quartz. That matters when you’re flipping the heat on and off, over and over. It handles the shock, and it stays steady even when the filament is running hot. A reflective coating pushes the infrared energy forward, so more of it lands on the target and less goes wandering off. And the R7s connector? It’s an industrial standard for a reason—so the bulb drops right in on many existing fixtures. No re-engineering. Just swap and go.
Where they shine: the factory floor
You’ll see these bulbs earning their keep on PET preform heating, plastic welding, and curing lines—places where you need heat that’s dense, steady, and reliable. The payoff is quick response, control you can trust, and a compact shape that fits into tight machine spaces. Just keep one thing in mind: this kind of heat density needs proper cooling and good alignment. If you run it without airflow or shielding, the lamp will run hotter—and that shortens its life. Give it the right setup, and it’ll show up, day after day.