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Science/Tech
See other Science/Tech Articles

Title: LED Replacements for 100-Watt Light Bulbs Hit Stores
Source: AP/Time
URL Source: http://techland.time.com/2012/11/13 ... ulbs-hit-stores/?iid=obnetwork
Published: Nov 13, 2012
Author: Peter Svensson
Post Date: 2012-11-28 19:45:05 by scrapper2
Keywords: LED light bulbs, 100 watt bulbs gone 01/2013
Views: 493
Comments: 37

NEW YORK (AP) — Sorry to see 100-watt bulbs disappear from stores because they were energy hogs? You can now get LED bulbs that roughly match the 100-watters for size and brightness, but use far less energy.

Until recently, your only alternative was a compact fluorescent bulb, which has several drawbacks compared with light-emitting diodes. Most people see the light quality as less pleasing, and the bulbs contain a small amount of mercury that’s released if the glass breaks. LEDs, by contrast, don’t contain any volatile, hazardous substances and are durable. They also last longer.

Osram Sylvania, a division of Germany’s Siemens AG, said Monday that it’s shipping the first batches of its Ultra LED bulb to some Lowe’s stores. The bulb uses 20 watts of electricity and costs $50. It’s slightly larger than a regular 100-watt bulb, so it may not fit in all fixtures. Osram claims 25,000 hours of use, or more than 20 times the lifespan of a standard, incandescent bulb.

Competitors aren’t far behind. Royal Philips Electronics NV plans to start selling its own, slightly brighter 100-watt-equivalent LED bulb at Home Depot’s website starting in a few weeks for about $55. Startup Switch Lighting Bulb Co., with its unusual liquid-filled bulbs, plans to start selling 100-watt equivalents late this year or in January.

The federal government banned the manufacture of regular 100-watt bulbs on Jan. 1 as a consequence of new energy-efficiency standards. Much the way it forces car manufacturers to improve fuel efficiency, the government is forcing the lighting industry to move away from incandescent bulbs because they convert relatively little of the electrical input into light. Most of the energy is dissipated as heat. In the next step, 75-watt bulbs will be banned at the start of next year, and 60-watt and 40-watt bulbs at the start of 2014.

Compact fluorescent bulbs that produce light equivalent to 100-watt bulbs have been available for a few years and cost as little as $4 each.

LEDs are small chips that produce light when current passes through them. In their red and green incarnations, they’ve been around for decades. Technical breakthroughs in the 90s allowed the manufacture of chips that produce white light.

LED bulbs equivalent to 60-watt bulbs have been available for a few years and now cost around $25 each. The problem with making brighter models is that while LEDs produce less heat than regular bulbs, the heat they do create shortens the lifespan and reduces the efficiency of the chips. Cramming a dozen chips together in a tight bulb-shaped package that fits in today’s lamps and sockets makes the heat problem worse, and the brighter the bulb, the more heat is produced. LED bulbs have large, finned metal collars to radiate the heat.

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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 34.

#29. To: scrapper2, 4 (#0)

Sorry to see 100-watt bulbs disappear from stores because they were energy hogs? You can now get LED bulbs that roughly match the 100-watters for size and brightness, but use far less energy.

I was a step ahead of the SOBs. I bought two cases at Amazon a few months ago and I'll be bathed in the glow of 100 watt light for the next 30 years, or upon my death, which ever comes first.

Jethro Tull  posted on  2012-11-29   20:24:29 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#33. To: Jethro Tull (#29)

I bought two cases at Amazon a few months ago and I'll be bathed in the glow of 100 watt light for the next 30 years, or upon my death, which ever comes first.

Goddamn JT! The electric company oughtta be supplying you with free BJs. There used to be a program here where the power co. would give people free incan bulbs. I don't know if that's still around or not.

All seriousness aside, one of the benefits of low energy lighting besides the obvious monthly savings on your electric bill, is in an emergency when you're on a backup generator. I can fully power my house, including the A/C, with an 8,000 Watt generator.

I've worked on a lot of houses damaged by incandescent bulbs burning things. Typically it was ceiling fixtures rated fo 60 or 75 Watt bulbs running 100 W bulbs. It would char the drywall pretty badly and burn up the wiring in the fixtures. High Watt bulbs are also really hard on lamp shades.

Esso  posted on  2012-11-29   20:58:34 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#34. To: Esso (#33)

It would char the drywall pretty badly and burn up the wiring in the fixtures. High Watt bulbs are also really hard on lamp shades.

Halogens are just dangerous IMO.

tom007  posted on  2012-11-29   21:01:08 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


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