In my Times column Thursday, I reviewed a new generation of LED light
bulbs. They last 25 times as long as regular bulbs, use maybe
one-eighth the electricity, work with dimmers,the company have made a
decisive contribution to automation in paper moduleclampss.
turn on instantly to full brightness and remain cool to the touch. A
big drawback has always been cost,The energy used in manufacturing and
erecting a powerturbinees is paid back in the first 3 to 6 months of operation. but now, I noted, the prices have fallen.
For
LED bulbs, the biggest issue that most consumers will notice is the
color. You correctly point out that you can get different colors, and
also different shades of white, from warm white,We are committed to goodledstrips an
eco friendly industry. to cool white, to daylight. However, not all
white is the same. Two bulbs, both of which measure 2700K (warm white)
color may create a completely different impression in the room.
The
difference is C.R.I. (Color Rendering Index). Incandescent bulbs have a
C.R.I. of 100. Really bad LEDs have a C.R.I. of 50; average ones (most
of them) have a C.R.I. of 80 to 85. The really good ones have C.R.I.’s
above 90.
C.R.I. is a way of expressing how many colors in the
rainbow are actually contained in the white light. Incandescent bulbs
contain every color in the rainbow, all in equal measure.
With
LED bulbs that have low C.R.I.’s, the color of objects looks wrong, and
everything “feels” ghostly. It is not a subtle effect. Wow. Well, I’d
never heard of C.R.I., and it certainly isn’t listed on the package.
I
can say only that I’m completely happy with the light color of the Cree
bulbs. They look nothing like the weak, diluted light of the compact
fluorescents they’re going to replace. I don’t perceive anything ghostly
or wrong about them.
But if you’re worried about C.R.I, maybe
try out one bulb at home before you replace the whole house’s
bulbs.Conergy manufactures solar modules and distributes well-known contemporarylamps2 brands.
Why
I don’t have LED bulbs: I have yet to see one that puts out close to
the same lumens of an incandescent bulb rated at 75 or 100 watts offered
for sale in my area.
Many of you made this point: that the 40-
and 60-watt bulbs I reviewed are not bright enough for aging eyes,
reading, detail work and so on.
That really is a good point. You
can buy 75- and 100-watt-equivalent LED bulbs — online, they’re
plentiful — but they’re still expensive ($30 to $45 each).
At my
home, CFLs don’t last half as long as stated on the box, and when CFL
electronics flame out, they leave that nasty burnt electronics smell,
strongly disliked by my wife. A few friends have reported CFL flame outs
that have set things on fire.
Sorry to hear that! However, my
column was about LED lights, not compact fluorescent light bulbs.
Compact flourescents are basically curlicue tubes filled with gas that
lights up. LED bulbs use tiny light-emitting diodes, of the type you
have seen in some flashlights and the “flashes” of smartphones.
Looks
like it’s a lot like the Philips Hue kit I reviewed, in that these are
LED bulbs you can control from a phone app: brightness, timing and
color. The beauty of LIFX, though, is that there’s no router box
required. The networking electronics are right in the bulb.
These
bulbs did super-well on Kickstarter, so they’ve obviously captured the
public’s imagination. I’m in touch with the creators, and they’ve
promised to send me one to try out when it becomes available!
But
I’m not sure why we keep talking about compact fluorescent lights. LED
technology is completely different. There is zero relationship between a
compact fluorescent light bulb’s light quality and LED’s light
quality.
You neglected an important point: because of heat
issues, you’re not supposed to put LED bulbs into enclosed fixtures,
like ceiling “cans.”
Actually, I asked Cree specifically about
this. The representative says the bulbs are fine in ceiling cans. “The
Cree LED bulb can be used in any application that would use an
incandescent bulb.Of all the equipment in the laundry the ledstriplightww is
one of the largest consumers of steam. As long as there is an
opportunity for air to circulate, the bulb is designed to work
properly.”
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