Rubycon
Madame President
- Aug 10, 2005
- 17,768
- 485
- 126
I would, but that's what's great, everybody is different!
So you would enjoy the equivalent of getting sprayed with hot slag from a blast furnace?! :sneaky:
I would, but that's what's great, everybody is different!
And the mercury in the lamp itself is any better? Have you seen what you are supposed to do in case you break one?
Step 1 - Leave for 15 minutes, air out the house.
So you would enjoy the equivalent of getting sprayed with hot slag from a blast furnace?! :sneaky:
I saw some LED lamps at Costco a few weeks back for a 'reasonable' (more expensive than CFL) price. Unfortunately, there was no colour temp selection, just 'warm' 3000ks.
ok i guess costco lights look a bit like this
the ge lights at walmart looked more like the real deal
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Nice showerhead! Does it make coffee too? I can see the jingle now:
"The best part of waking up...
Is with some photons in your cup!"
"I borrowed a neighbor's LED 5W LOA bulb that he bought at Costco and put it on a Kill-A-Watt® power meter, and although the stamp on the bulb says it draws 100 mA, it actually was drawing 150 mA (power draw was indeed 5W as labeled). Worse yet, the power factor of this particular bulb is a measly 0.31, which means that even though your electric utility company is only charging you for the 5W of electrical power it consumes, the utility company is actually having to force roughly 18 W worth of electricity down the wire to power it. So you will be saving yourself money powering this bulb, but the planet will be feeling the full "18W" worth of fuel being burned back at the power plant and the full 18W worth of greenhouse gas that will be produced.
For reference, incandescent bulbs have a power factor of roughly 0.98 or so, which means that if the label says it is a 60W bulb, the electric utility is generating that same 60W worth of electricity to power that incandescent bulb at your house (ignoring transmission losses). With their power factor close to 1.0, icandescent bulbs are "true to their labeling" in terms of the power consumed back at the power plant, and with regard to the amperage you expect them to be drawing through your house wiring (60W/120V/0.98=0.51A, assuming PF=0.98). So although an incandescent bulb uses more power, what you see is what you get. Not so for these modern LED and CFL bulbs with low power factors, wherein the electrical current in your house wiring to power the LED or CFL is anywhere from 2X-5X more current than the labeled watts would indicate.
If this LOA 5W LED bulb was truly well-designed and efficient, it would have a power factor ("PF") of at least 0.95, in which case the current draw would be only 45 mA, not 150 mA (assuming 120 volts AC electrical supply). In fairness, many current LED bulbs that run on AC house power are similarly inefficient (power factors in the range of 0.20-0.45 are apparently more common than one would like to think).
Similarly, most CFL bulbs have a power factor of 0.55-0.65, which means that CFL bulbs require the power company to deliver almost twice the electrical current to the bulb than you are paying for, and the result is the air pollution and resource consumption back at the power plant is roughly 2X what the labeled CFL bulb wattage would have you believe.
"http://www.ecohuddle.com/forum/thread/1141/costco-brand-led-floodlights-on-the-cheap
interesting if true.
"I borrowed a neighbor's LED 5W LOA bulb that he bought at Costco and put it on a Kill-A-Watt® power meter, and although the stamp on the bulb says it draws 100 mA, it actually was drawing 150 mA (power draw was indeed 5W as labeled). Worse yet, the power factor of this particular bulb is a measly 0.31, which means that even though your electric utility company is only charging you for the 5W of electrical power it consumes, the utility company is actually having to force roughly 18 W worth of electricity down the wire to power it. So you will be saving yourself money powering this bulb, but the planet will be feeling the full "18W" worth of fuel being burned back at the power plant and the full 18W worth of greenhouse gas that will be produced.
For reference, incandescent bulbs have a power factor of roughly 0.98 or so, which means that if the label says it is a 60W bulb, the electric utility is generating that same 60W worth of electricity to power that incandescent bulb at your house (ignoring transmission losses). With their power factor close to 1.0, icandescent bulbs are "true to their labeling" in terms of the power consumed back at the power plant, and with regard to the amperage you expect them to be drawing through your house wiring (60W/120V/0.98=0.51A, assuming PF=0.98). So although an incandescent bulb uses more power, what you see is what you get. Not so for these modern LED and CFL bulbs with low power factors, wherein the electrical current in your house wiring to power the LED or CFL is anywhere from 2X-5X more current than the labeled watts would indicate.
If this LOA 5W LED bulb was truly well-designed and efficient, it would have a power factor ("PF") of at least 0.95, in which case the current draw would be only 45 mA, not 150 mA (assuming 120 volts AC electrical supply). In fairness, many current LED bulbs that run on AC house power are similarly inefficient (power factors in the range of 0.20-0.45 are apparently more common than one would like to think).
Similarly, most CFL bulbs have a power factor of 0.55-0.65, which means that CFL bulbs require the power company to deliver almost twice the electrical current to the bulb than you are paying for, and the result is the air pollution and resource consumption back at the power plant is roughly 2X what the labeled CFL bulb wattage would have you believe.
"http://www.ecohuddle.com/forum/thread/1141/costco-brand-led-floodlights-on-the-cheap
interesting if true.
Now if they can come up with a way so the driver is separate from the bulb and they'll be even more cost effective. I bet lot of the cost of LEDs is the driver. Have to lower to a voltage low enough for a LED and also convert to DC (I think).
Either way I'm looking forward to see LED become more standardized, I think this is the future of lighting.
But for the love of God, those blue LED car lights need to be illegal until pure white LEDs come out!
But for the love of God, those blue LED car lights need to be illegal until pure white LEDs come out!
ok i guess costco lights look a bit like this
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3.5 watts..thats a flashlight alright![]()
