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Science/Tech See other Science/Tech Articles Title: Cree’s LED bulb looks like an incandescent and lights like one, for under $10 Crees LED bulb looks like an incandescent and lights like one, for under $10 Today Cree, the North Carolina-based LED manufacturer, is making a move that will have major implications for the LED lighting industry. The company, which is known for its high-quality LEDs and its lighting fixtures, has announced a line of LED bulbs, marking the first time it will offer the A-style replacement bulb that lights most homes. This will put Cree in competition against giants like Philips and GE, as well as directly up against companies that buy Cree LEDs, like Best Buy. While Cree offering bulbs is big news for LED insiders, todays announcement is notable for consumers as well. This is because Cree will be extremely competitive with its pricing. The line of Cree LED bulbs (thats actually the name) will include three models: a warm white 60W-equivalent at $12.97, a daylight 60W-equivalent at $13.97, and a warm white 40W-equivalent at $9.97. In other words, Cree isnt only coming out with a line of bulbs they are also breaking the $10 mark, something which competitors are not going to be able to ignore. All three of the bulbs will be available from HomeDepot.com today and in Home Depots by the end of the month. If its not clear yet, Cree is striking at the heart of the consumer LED lighting segment. The company is doing this with a three-pronged approach
The first point of attack is price. Breaking the $15 and $10 marks is big but, importantly, Cree is doing it with a quality lamp. Buyers have been able to pick up a 40W-equivalent Ecosmart LEDs at Home Depot for $9.97 for some time now, but its not a great bulb. The second point of attack is confidence. Consumers may not know the Cree name, but the company will soon have Energy Star compliance for each model making for a meaningful seal of approval. Moreover, each bulb is backed by a 10-year warranty. 3-5 years is typical in the 25,000-hour-lifetime market, so Cree is putting some weight behind their claims. Finally, the Cree LED bulb looks like an incandescent bulb. LED lighting may be getting more popular, but consumers still care how a bulb looks when its off. And when the average buyer needs to replace an incandescent they want something thats as close as possible to that design. Cree recognized this and delivered LEDs encased in frosted glass with a true bulb shape. The mainstay bulb in the series will be the $13 warm white (2700K) 60W-replacement. This $14 bulb will produce 800 lumens at 9.5W (84.2 lumens-per-watt). Cree is going for an incandescent-like experience so they opted for 2700K instead of 3000K, which has efficiency benefits but offers a cooler tone. Like the other two bulbs in the series, this model is dimmable, has a CRI of 80, and is rated for 25,000 hours of use. The $14 60W-equivalent model runs at 5000K and produces 800 lumens at 9.0W (88.9 lpw). The $10 40W-equivalent bulb will produce 450 lumens at 6W (75 lpw) with a color temperature of 2700K. On the hardware front, the Cree LED bulb has what appears to be a very conventional design. The interesting thing is that the design is conventional for an incandescent, which is hard to pull off with LEDs. The exterior is a glass dome and is the first sign that something unique is going on. The majority of LED bulbs, aside from Switchs, use plastic because its cheap and durable. Cree opted instead for glass, but they coated the glass with a tacky rubber in order to make it shatter-resistant. The glass and bulb shape give the Cree bulb a true omnidirectional light pattern, though it seems like dust and grime could build up on the sticky rubber material. I havent opened up the Cree bulbs Im testing, but the available art of the interior shows another homage to the incandescent. Cree calls this their LED Filament Tower. The design features pairs of XP-E LEDs in a ring around a central tower, inside of which is the driver circuitry. This design is modeled after an incandescents filament, but also is reminiscent of the out-dated corncob style LED bulbs. Corncob bulbs were somewhat popular but provided poor light quality, so have since been replaced with better technology. Cree modified this design and replaced the long columns of cheap LEDs with 10 pairs of high-voltage ones. Cooling the LEDs and fitting a driver inside the tower, all while keeping costs down, must have been a challenge for the engineering team. Ive only used the 60W-equivalent 2700K Cree bulb for a few hours, so its too early to deliver a verdict, but so far all the news is good. The bulb is lightweight, starts up quickly, is responsible about power (my meter put it at 8W), and it runs at a cozy, incandescent-like 2700K. The light pattern seems right on target for an omnidirectional design. The bulb, which is able to run in an enclosure and in any orientation just like an incandescent remains cool to the touch (very much unlike an incandescent). With this series of LED bulbs Cree wants to make a convincing case to buyers who are tempted to switch from their incandescents and CFLs. Mike Watson, Crees VP of Marketing, told me the company will avoid niche markets and produce bulbs that move the world towards 100% LED adoption. While thats certainly an optimistic goal, this release is a step in that direction. It remains to be seen if the $10 point is the barrier to rapid adoption that LED light manufacturers are now claiming it is just a year ago most would have put the mark at $15 but the availability of high-quality, affordable LED bulbs is one thing that is sure to boost LED sales. Crees LED bulbs will be available through Home Depot online on March 5th and in all US Home Depot stores on March 21st. Now read: Philips Hue is where gadgets, apps, and lighting meet Today Cree, the North Carolina-based LED manufacturer, is making a move that will have major implications for the LED lighting industry. The company, which is known for its high-quality LEDs and its lighting fixtures, has announced a line of LED bulbs, marking the first time it will offer the A-style replacement bulb that lights most homes. This will put Cree in competition against giants like Philips and GE, as well as directly up against companies that buy Cree LEDs, like Best Buy. While Cree offering bulbs is big news for LED insiders, todays announcement is notable for consumers as well. This is because Cree will be extremely competitive with its pricing. The line of Cree LED bulbs (thats actually the name) will include three models: a warm white 60W-equivalent at $12.97, a daylight 60W-equivalent at $13.97, and a warm white 40W-equivalent at $9.97. In other words, Cree isnt only coming out with a line of bulbs they are also breaking the $10 mark, something which competitors are not going to be able to ignore. All three of the bulbs will be available from HomeDepot.com today and in Home Depots by the end of the month. If its not clear yet, Cree is striking at the heart of the consumer LED lighting segment. The company is doing this with a three-pronged approach
The first point of attack is price. Breaking the $15 and $10 marks is big but, importantly, Cree is doing it with a quality lamp. Buyers have been able to pick up a 40W-equivalent Ecosmart LEDs at Home Depot for $9.97 for some time now, but its not a great bulb. The second point of attack is confidence. Consumers may not know the Cree name, but the company will soon have Energy Star compliance for each model making for a meaningful seal of approval. Moreover, each bulb is backed by a 10-year warranty. 3-5 years is typical in the 25,000-hour-lifetime market, so Cree is putting some weight behind their claims. Finally, the Cree LED bulb looks like an incandescent bulb. LED lighting may be getting more popular, but consumers still care how a bulb looks when its off. And when the average buyer needs to replace an incandescent they want something thats as close as possible to that design. Cree recognized this and delivered LEDs encased in frosted glass with a true bulb shape. The mainstay bulb in the series will be the $13 warm white (2700K) 60W-replacement. This $14 bulb will produce 800 lumens at 9.5W (84.2 lumens-per-watt). Cree is going for an incandescent-like experience so they opted for 2700K instead of 3000K, which has efficiency benefits but offers a cooler tone. Like the other two bulbs in the series, this model is dimmable, has a CRI of 80, and is rated for 25,000 hours of use. The $14 60W-equivalent model runs at 5000K and produces 800 lumens at 9.0W (88.9 lpw). The $10 40W-equivalent bulb will produce 450 lumens at 6W (75 lpw) with a color temperature of 2700K. On the hardware front, the Cree LED bulb has what appears to be a very conventional design. The interesting thing is that the design is conventional for an incandescent, which is hard to pull off with LEDs. The exterior is a glass dome and is the first sign that something unique is going on. The majority of LED bulbs, aside from Switchs, use plastic because its cheap and durable. Cree opted instead for glass, but they coated the glass with a tacky rubber in order to make it shatter-resistant. The glass and bulb shape give the Cree bulb a true omnidirectional light pattern, though it seems like dust and grime could build up on the sticky rubber material. I havent opened up the Cree bulbs Im testing, but the available art of the interior shows another homage to the incandescent. Cree calls this their LED Filament Tower. The design features pairs of XP-E LEDs in a ring around a central tower, inside of which is the driver circuitry. This design is modeled after an incandescents filament, but also is reminiscent of the out-dated corncob style LED bulbs. Corncob bulbs were somewhat popular but provided poor light quality, so have since been replaced with better technology. Cree modified this design and replaced the long columns of cheap LEDs with 10 pairs of high-voltage ones. Cooling the LEDs and fitting a driver inside the tower, all while keeping costs down, must have been a challenge for the engineering team. Ive only used the 60W-equivalent 2700K Cree bulb for a few hours, so its too early to deliver a verdict, but so far all the news is good. The bulb is lightweight, starts up quickly, is responsible about power (my meter put it at 8W), and it runs at a cozy, incandescent-like 2700K. The light pattern seems right on target for an omnidirectional design. The bulb, which is able to run in an enclosure and in any orientation just like an incandescent remains cool to the touch (very much unlike an incandescent). With this series of LED bulbs Cree wants to make a convincing case to buyers who are tempted to switch from their incandescents and CFLs. Mike Watson, Crees VP of Marketing, told me the company will avoid niche markets and produce bulbs that move the world towards 100% LED adoption. While thats certainly an optimistic goal, this release is a step in that direction. It remains to be seen if the $10 point is the barrier to rapid adoption that LED light manufacturers are now claiming it is just a year ago most would have put the mark at $15 but the availability of high-quality, affordable LED bulbs is one thing that is sure to boost LED sales. Crees LED bulbs will be available through Home Depot online on March 5th and in all US Home Depot stores on March 21st. Now read: Philips Hue is where gadgets, apps, and lighting meet Poster Comment: The other nice thing about LEDs, in addition to low power and long life, is that they do not emit high frequency emf radiation like the compact fluorescent bulbs do. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: HOUNDDAWG, christine, abraxas, farmfriend, Lod, James Deffenbach, HighLairEon, All (#0)
This ought to light up your life ping. ;-)
They're already here in local HDs. Thanx 4 the ping my friend. The people who have access to this information like the sense of being unique and privileged. Thats the psychology of secret organizations and why they flourish. Privileged information is the ambrosia of elitists. It gives them a sense of power, and the human ego loves to feed from the trough of power.
too cool!
A study group recently released its findings as to the best presidents of the United States of America. Obama has been rated as the 4th best president ever: Reagan and 9 others tied for first, 15 presidents tied for second, 18 tied for third, and Obama came in fourth. 84 lumens/Watt is pretty damn good, they've finally surpassed the efficiency of CFLs which usually runs about 50-65 lumens/Watt, incandescents ~14 lumens/Watt. If their claims of 25,000 hours life is true, they will easily pay for themselves several times over their lifespan. 60 Watt incandescent for 25,000 hours 13 Watt (60W/eq.) CFL for 25,000 hours CREE 9.5 Watt LED for 25,000 hours $13/bulb is going to scare a lot of people away even though they would save almost $150 per bulb in electricity cost over incandescents. They're not available at my local HD yet. They're backordered until 3/20/2013 online. Godfrey Smith: Mike, I wouldn't worry. Prosperity is just around the corner. You are most welcome.
Have a cree powered flashlight,three AAA bats, and DO NOT look atthe light directly. Frikking powerhouse of a light from Costco. Coolness. I need a new emergency flashlight too. My current one works but it is an old fashioned incandescent. I have bad memories of small incandescent bulbs dating back to the time I was fishing a lake in the Three Sisters Wilderness. I fished right up to nearly dark and then started back up the trail to camp. I had just got under the pitch black of the forest canopy when the light died - which was just before I got to the switchback trail coming up out of the caldera. I walked 3 miles in the dark "flicking my Bic" to stay on the trail and not tumble down the side of the caldera. I eventually made a wrong turn that turned out to be fortuitous. About 100 yards up the wrong stretch I ran into - pavement. I walked back the rest of the way on the lonely deserted highway.
the LED bulbs I've been using for about a year now have three three watt LEDs, they illuminate nicely and use the same power in ten hours what a 100 watt rated bulb uses in one minute. the big up side to LED lights is that there is no power consumption surge when they are turned on.
Dittos. I am overflashlighted bc of horrific night time camping trips where the zinc batt and the incandesents were wreched. Bot a bunch of "Enloops" slow discharge NiHd AAA and AA batts, and WOW the performance of them is nearly shocking compared to the tired fleet of NiHd and Cads I had had for quite a while. So I reclcled them and are going all Enloops. They perform - so far. Three years IIRC, have 70% of there charge, a normal NiMd is useless in three months. the last 10 pack of LED bulbs (9 watt, three three watt LEDs) with Cree LEDs cost me $24.95 and free shipping.
And three months of the Enloops will have 97% charge - or so. The clear way to go if you like to charge batts for traveling devices. Headlamps, cameras music etc. Never occured to me - "incandesents " are a closed circuit when started. Just like a motor. Thanks for the insight I. Edit Toss it. New LED lights spank the old flashlights. Hard and Bad. I keep saying I'm going to, but why do today what I can put off till tomorrow?
The most dangerous man to any government is the man who is able to think things out... without regard to the prevailing superstitions and taboos. Almost inevitably he comes to the conclusion that the government he lives under is dishonest, insane, intolerable. ~ H. L. Mencken |
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