In my kitchen I have some light bulbs that keep going out FAST. They're recessed kinda like this. I use incandescent and don't wish to change. There's no obvious indication of why.
AstroKeith said:Eventually you'll have to change from incandescent lamps.
After a little while I now prefer LED, the ability to choose colour temperature is great.
JeremyH. said:Sorry but I can show you measurements, there is no such thing as a non-noisy LED currently.
DeformedTree said:JeremyH. said:Sorry but I can show you measurements, there is no such thing as a non-noisy LED currently.
When you say noisy, do you mean sound, or do you mean electrically noisy?
if sound, are you thinking florescent. No LED makes sound. The noise of Florescent and some CFLs was annoying. LEDs make no sound.
DeformedTree said:JeremyH. said:Sorry but I can show you measurements, there is no such thing as a non-noisy LED currently.
When you say noisy, do you mean sound, or do you mean electrically noisy?
if sound, are you thinking florescent. No LED makes sound. The noise of Florescent and some CFLs was annoying. LEDs make no sound.
DeformedTree said:Curious what you have that this would be an issue. Do you have scientific instruments plugged into your house?
Cheese said:I guess I don't quite know what the aversion to LED lighting is all about. The color fidelity is better, the energy usage is less, the bulb life is longer, what did I miss?
serge0n said:Further, LEDs can be either at a 100% brightness or at a 0% brightness, you can't dim them. But you can simulate the effect by keeping them turned off 75% of the time and on 25% of the time, switching them on and off very rapidly (75% dimmed). The problem with dimming LEDs is that a cheap LED driver which is needed to achieve this effect will produce a lot more flicker than even a cheap LED bulb at all levels of brightness, even when you turn it all the way up. And once again, good LED dimmers are hard to find.
Bulbs that heat up filament to produce light can be easily dimmed by reducing voltage.