Comment 1BZ1E Re: Great but

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More efficient new LEDs now available, over 200lm/W

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Great but (Score: 0)

by Anonymous Coward on 2016-04-22 04:48 (#1BCH5)

We have a long way to go. It is an improvement that one light in the circuit doesn't blow the rest. That one socket can be replaced without affecting the others. The power config isn't good. Turning the light switch off doesn't actually turn off the power. Which can lead to current running through you if you change a bulb with the lightswitch off. That did not hurt, but it wasn't good. Then we have the problem of cost: 1 power cord per light is an upfront cost that can be borne, but the cost of replacing the power packs every couple of years adds up. I remember buying cheap ass $1 light bulbs for years and replacing them without hassle. Going through putting out the whole socket and buying a new transforming for every light in the house is starting to seriously piss me off. The way they churn through bulbs is a concern. The cost of the bulbs is a concern at what? $5 to $25 a bulb? Geez. That hurts. This room has 8 of them in the ceiling. Start multiplying. Yes, it is an improvement over halogen which quite frankly was a secondary heater in the house. There are still improvements to be made. One of them is not using springs with so much tension that they rip through the ceiling plasterboard when the socket is pulled down.

Re: Great but (Score: 3, Insightful)

by evilviper@pipedot.org on 2016-04-22 08:31 (#1BD0F)

You can get CFLs and LEDs for $1, and screw them into the same E27 / A19 fixtures your old lightbulbs used. If you've opted for different fixtures and bulbs, which don't work well, that was your own mistake, and irrelevant to the lighting technology. I expect most people were smart enough to avoid that trap.

Re: Great but (Score: 0)

by Anonymous Coward on 2016-04-22 15:30 (#1BEBV)

After 5 different types of transformer and trying every led globe type and paying an electrician to prove it isn't the mains power I am done with this technology.

Re: Great but (Score: 0)

by Anonymous Coward on 2016-04-27 12:16 (#1BZ1E)

Sounds like candles and olive oil lamps might be your best bet.

You still haven't explained to anybody how you can turn your switch off yet still have power running to your LED bulbs. That would happen regardless of what kind of bulb you have in there, unless your LED bulbs are powered by some kind of magic.

Junk Status

Marked as [Not Junk] by bryan@pipedot.org on 2016-05-06 23:02