LED Light Bulbs?

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Old 04-05-2013, 06:53 PM
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Those CREEs look good.
Old 04-08-2013, 11:00 AM
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I read that the mfg. states for the Cree LED bulb is not for use in "enclosed ceiling fixtures"

True?
Old 04-12-2013, 03:02 AM
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Originally Posted by Moog-Type-S
I read that the mfg. states for the Cree LED bulb is not for use in "enclosed ceiling fixtures"

True?
The guy at Home Depot told me the same thing but I read the entire package and it mentioned nothing to that effect.

I just found this: http://www.designingwithleds.com/qa-...ment-led-bulb/

Or to cut straight to the chase....

I asked Mike a question that reader Chris posed in the original tear down piece: Can you use this bulb in an enclosed fixture? As Sal Cangeloso suggested in the comments, Cree intends that you be able to use the bulb in any application you would an incandescent.
Old 04-15-2013, 04:02 PM
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I just bought a 3 pack of LED bulbs from Costco for $18.

Nice warm light.

I installed them in a bathroom fixture, and so far, so good.
If I continue to like them, I will probably buy more...especially at that price.
Old 06-21-2013, 04:27 PM
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I picked up a CREE LED at Home Depot to try it out. I like it. No turn on delay and I prefer the light output over CFL.

Still hard to justify in my mind because I also picked up a 6 pack of incandescent for about $5 while the CREE bulb was about $13.

I doubt I will ever again buy a CFL. IMO they tend to not last anywhere near their advertised life.

It's the same bulb that PortlandRL posted on previous page.

Last edited by doopstr; 06-21-2013 at 04:34 PM.
Old 07-06-2013, 03:26 PM
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Since I last posted we converted the four front lights outside of the garage and the front porch to the 40 watt Cree LEDs as those bulbs were burning left and right. It was especially bad during the winter where it gets dark at 4:30 here and the sun doesn't rise again until 8 AM. I want to do the family room downstairs next but that'll need six more.
Old 07-07-2013, 02:56 AM
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My entire kitchen has been completely remodeled. All LED lights, Cree mostly that I got off of Amazon. I love it. Gotta install the dimmer switch this week..
Old 07-08-2013, 07:12 AM
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Do have some LED's in the house for under cabinet and back-lighting but until the prices drop basically only the early adapter technocrats will be buying LED's for the majority of their lighting needs. Been using CFL's since 96 so until the price point drops to 2-3X I can't see a reason to change. Still too expensive compared to CFL.

Old 09-30-2013, 08:32 AM
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I replaced all of my exterior lights with Feit LED bulbs from Costco. I had been running Phillips Halogena bulbs out there.

I have two fixtures that take three candelabra-type bulbs. I had tried some warm white Util-Tech bulbs that I picked up at Lowes that were terribly dim in comparison. The Feits that I put in are every bit as bright as the Halogenas and have an identical color. I'm very pleased with them. I did have one pack of three bulbs that had two of three defective in it, so I'm crossing my fingers that the long-term durability is there.

The A19 based bulbs in the remaining fixtures are bright enough and have a good matching warm white color, but I prefer the look of a clear bulb in them. I'd almost like to try some of the clear glass "corn cob" LED bulbs that I've seen sold through a third party on Amazon.

Last edited by svtmike; 09-30-2013 at 08:34 AM.
Old 07-16-2014, 07:43 PM
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I've had this CREE LED bulb for about a year. For the last few months I've noticed that it developed a flicker. This usually happens for a short time after it has been turned on then then it is mostly fine after that. I don't have a dimmer on this light. Anyone else notice flicker?
Old 07-16-2014, 08:00 PM
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I picked up some 40watt equiv for my dining room. Pretty nice. Just 2 of them are enough to light up the room. I can't imagine if I installed all 6 bulbs.

I do like that they light up instantly after the half second delay (ignition?)

No flickers on mine but they're only 6 months old
Old 07-17-2014, 08:30 AM
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We have kitchen pendant lights over the peninsula. To look right, the pendant globes have to be filled with 360 degree light, which has been a problem with leds, as many have dark areas.

Then I found Cree 75W-Equivalent-Soft-White-2700K-A19-Dimmable-LED-Light-Bulb at Home Depot. These have no structure to block the light and they fully illuminate the globes. They look exactly like incandescents in uni-drectional-ness and color temp.

They are dimmable and make 1100 lumens at 13.5 watts. They also have a rubbery coating intended to contain the glass if broken --and they have a 10 year warranty.

I got them for about $11 each with a veterans discount. We like them so much, I am intending to replace all bulbs with this Cree line as needed.

Old 07-18-2014, 05:23 PM
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Originally Posted by XLR8R
We have kitchen pendant lights over the peninsula. To look right, the pendant globes have to be filled with 360 degree light, which has been a problem with leds, as many have dark areas.

Then I found Cree 75W-Equivalent-Soft-White-2700K-A19-Dimmable-LED-Light-Bulb at Home Depot. These have no structure to block the light and they fully illuminate the globes. They look exactly like incandescents in uni-drectional-ness and color temp.

They are dimmable and make 1100 lumens at 13.5 watts. They also have a rubbery coating intended to contain the glass if broken --and they have a 10 year warranty.

I got them for about $11 each with a veterans discount. We like them so much, I am intending to replace all bulbs with this Cree line as needed.

We just put in 70 of the Cree 100 watt version of the same bulb (2700K dimable) in our church. We love them and they will totally pay for themselves in about 7 years just on electricity savings alone. And they should last 24 years.
Old 08-08-2014, 02:44 AM
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So far the Cree LED bulbs are taking over the Fields household. The retrofit is only targeting frequently used and/or under-illuminated rooms and I think once the bathrooms that use incandescent bulbs are converted, we'll be done. There's simply no justifying the cost of conversion in a guest room that gets used twice a year at most. So far this is what we've done:

- 2 out of 5 bedrooms; 4 bulbs total
- Laundry Room; 3 bulbs
- Pantry; 1 bulb (this helped illuminate it immensely)
- Kitchen; 9 flood bulbs (this was NOT cheap)
- Downstairs Family Room: 6 bulbs
- Front outdoor lighting: 4 bulbs

Total: 27 Cree LED lights and a zero failure rate thus far. The wattage savings over the incandescent lamps these lights replaced is substantial; 297 combined watts for the LEDs over 1,665 watts consumed by the incandescents they superseded.

Last edited by PortlandRL; 08-08-2014 at 02:47 AM.
Old 08-08-2014, 08:27 AM
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I've noticed that these bulbs have come down in price in the last couple of months. The Cree are now around $5-$7 each at Home Depot. I just replaced all of my dining room chandelier bulbs with Ecosmart bulbs that were $6 each. That should be a pretty decent reduction in energy use for us since it's on most of the day. 200w now 25w.

I'm pretty happy with LED now. I can't tell any difference in the light these things put out compared to incandescent. I still have one that flickers sometimes. I haven't been able to tell if it's some other load in the house causing it to flicker or if it's defective. I also like that these bulbs all seem to support dimmers now.

I have a few CFL that I'm going to replace with LED. The light output from LED is superior.

Last edited by doopstr; 08-08-2014 at 08:37 AM.
Old 08-08-2014, 01:12 PM
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I swapped out the lights in my kitchen, bedroom, and bathroom about six months ago...6 floods in kitchen, 4 bulbs in the bedroom, and 8 bulbs in the bathroom (4 in each fixture ). I'm happy, so far...great light and no flicker or any other issues. It's also a huge wattage savings over the bulbs I replaced (came with the house, ranged from 60 to 100). I don't use the lights a lot now, but will come winter...figure I should notice a difference then.
Old 08-09-2014, 03:58 AM
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Originally Posted by PortlandRL
Total: 27 Cree LED lights and a zero failure rate thus far. The wattage savings over the incandescent lamps these lights replaced is substantial; 297 combined watts for the LEDs over 1,665 watts consumed by the incandescents they superseded.
Wow that's a pretty huge savings. My bro was into this game early and made some bank distributing in the early days of cree leds. We own a condo together, and all our lights have been cree leds for about 5 years now. Being in our late 20's/early 30's we aren't the best with turning lights off, but honestly I don't feel they cost us much since a) they are leds, B) there's about 5 lights on in our 850sqft condo also we're yet to have one fail.

The light they give off to me at least is imperceptibly different from CFL, and the savings are great, I really hope the conversion rate continues to climb in mass channels. The energy savings are a no brainer IMO.
Old 08-09-2014, 04:52 AM
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I use LED lights and I have found that ALL of my cameras will have a blue tinge to the pictures. At least with the Sony SR-11 I can manually white balance it to remove said blue tinge
Old 08-09-2014, 10:02 PM
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Look at you guys. You're all making Al Gore so proud.
Old 08-09-2014, 11:19 PM
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Originally Posted by #1 STUNNA
Look at you guys. You're all making Al Gore so proud.
Funny...I thought we would be making *you* proud. Or are you still working through your pallets of hoarded incandescent bulbs?
Old 08-09-2014, 11:29 PM
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I live vicariously through him.

Actually I'm already all CFL. The cost benefit ratio is very small from CFL to LED. When my CFLs die I'll probably switch to LED but not anytime soon.

My electric company gave me a box of 8 CFLs just for having an energy audit done.

This is a great example of how saving the planet and saving money are not mutually exclusive

Last edited by #1 STUNNA; 08-09-2014 at 11:32 PM.
Old 08-10-2014, 04:04 AM
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We tried CFLs but disliked their buzzing, lengthy warm-up times and the fact that they rarely ever met their rated life expectancy. Additionally the mercury content gave us some concern.

When the incandescent bulb phase out (it isn't technically a ban) was announced, we hoarded bulbs because CFLs were the only option and it was one we didn't like. Now that LEDs offer similar or superior light quality and energy savings, it only makes sense.
Old 08-10-2014, 05:39 AM
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120W or 10W it's not a hard choice IMHO and now that they are roughly $9 each, you'll save that in your first 3-4 months alone especially if you are lazy and leave the lights on all the time...

http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_ss...e+%2Caps%2C185
Old 08-10-2014, 07:33 AM
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Originally Posted by #1 STUNNA
I live vicariously through him.

Actually I'm already all CFL. The cost benefit ratio is very small from CFL to LED. When my CFLs die I'll probably switch to LED but not anytime soon.

My electric company gave me a box of 8 CFLs just for having an energy audit done.

This is a great example of how saving the planet and saving money are not mutually exclusive
CFLs are the Blackberry of the light bulb world.
Old 08-10-2014, 01:00 PM
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Originally Posted by PortlandRL
We tried CFLs but disliked their buzzing, lengthy warm-up times and the fact that they rarely ever met their rated life expectancy. Additionally the mercury content gave us some concern.

When the incandescent bulb phase out (it isn't technically a ban) was announced, we hoarded bulbs because CFLs were the only option and it was one we didn't like. Now that LEDs offer similar or superior light quality and energy savings, it only makes sense.
Haven't had any issues with buzzing, and honestly I don't use the lights that much. Right now there's a enough sunlight that I don't need the lights on during the day so I don't use my CFLs much and you know for damn sure I'm not leaving lights on in rooms when no one is in there.

Warmup times don't bother me much, seems like on some it takes a while and others it seems instant.
Old 08-11-2014, 10:50 AM
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Originally Posted by #1 STUNNA
I live vicariously through him.

Actually I'm already all CFL. The cost benefit ratio is very small from CFL to LED. When my CFLs die I'll probably switch to LED but not anytime soon.

My electric company gave me a box of 8 CFLs just for having an energy audit done.

This is a great example of how saving the planet and saving money are not mutually exclusive
+1,
Old 08-11-2014, 11:30 AM
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On several occasions now, I have taken old CFLs to hardware stores to be recycled. Often I am forced to "explain" what I am trying to do and every time, the guys have shrugged and tossed the CFLs into the trash can behind the help desk.

There were broken CFLs visible in the trash can.
Old 08-11-2014, 11:37 AM
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Originally Posted by XLR8R
On several occasions now, I have taken old CFLs to hardware stores to be recycled. Often I am forced to "explain" what I am trying to do and every time, the guys have shrugged and tossed the CFLs into the trash can behind the help desk.

There were broken CFLs visible in the trash can.
Home Depot has a box for them at the entrance. What happens to them after that, no idea.
Old 08-12-2014, 09:08 PM
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A chickie friend at Lowes told me they dropped a crate of CFLs and DER made them close the store for the rest of the day.
Old 09-12-2014, 09:43 AM
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I started to replace all my CFLs with the Cree LED from Home Depot, prices have really seem to come down. LED are far superior IMHO. No warm up times (which i really hated, especially in the basement) very bright, and life should be far superior. I have had to replace a hand full of CFLs so far, i have had LED in the garage for a few years now and still working like a charm.
Old 09-12-2014, 12:23 PM
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I just got some lamps from Ikea and put LED bulbs in them, I like them except for the fact that their brand doesn't allow dimming, oh well
Old 09-19-2014, 12:52 PM
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Originally Posted by 97BlackAckCL
I just got some lamps from Ikea and put LED bulbs in them, I like them except for the fact that their brand doesn't allow dimming, oh well
The Cree ones from Home Depot are dimmable
Old 09-19-2014, 01:55 PM
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If you guys are experience flickering from the LED's, it might be that your light switch (dimming type) is not LED compatible. It seems to be only affected with anything that has a dimming effect. This happened to me in my new home fitted with LED's and I had quite a bit of flickering because the contractors didn't know that dimming light switches need to be LED compatible as well.
Old 09-20-2014, 01:31 AM
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I picked up some LEDs from ikea the other day and am thoroughly impressed with them. Colour temp is perfect
Old 10-08-2014, 02:26 PM
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The Inventors Of A 'Revolutionary' Blue LED Just Won A Nobel Prize | ThinkProgress
Three men who together helped increase the energy efficiency of lighting systems across the world have been awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics, the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences announced Tuesday.

Professors Isamu Akasaki, Hiroshi Amano, and Shuji Nakamura will share the Nobel for their invention of the blue light-emitting diode (LED), a technology now used to light up smartphones and computer screens, purify polluted water, and bring cost-effective, efficient white light to people all over the world. First created by the trio in 1990, the blue LED has helped “revolutionize” illumination technology — a revolution that the Academy deemed of “greatest benefit to mankind.”

“They succeeded where everyone else had failed,” the Academy said in a statement. “The invention of the blue LED is just twenty years old, but it has already contributed to create white light in an entirely new manner to the benefit of us all.”

White light — the kind naturally produced by the sun — can be artificially made by mixing red, green, and blue light. Before 1990, scientists had only figured out how to make green and red LEDs. That was a problem, because without blue, there was no way to replicate the usable white light formed by florescent lamps or conventional bulbs.

Akasaki, Amano, and Nakamura cracked the code. With their invention of the blue light, white LED light was finally able to be created. Those white LEDs soared in popularity for lighting systems, and for good reason — they are 20 times as efficient as incandescent bulbs; they lack the mercury-related health risks of fluorescent bulbs; and they last as long as 22 years before burning out.



LED lights produce the most lumens of light per watt of electrical power compared to other forms of light.
CREDIT: THE ROYAL SWEDISH ACADEMY OF SCIENCES

The Academy lauded the inventors for creating something environmentally-friendly, and noted that replacing all regular light bulbs and fluorescent tubes with LEDs would lead to a “drastic reduction” of electricity requirements for lighting. According to the Academy, 20 to 30 percent of all electricity consumed in industrial economies comes from lighting. If all of those bulbs were replaced with LEDs, that percentage would drop down to about 4 percent, the Academy said.

Though not mentioned by the Academy in its award, a reduction in electricity use as drastic as 16 to 26 percentage points would provide benefits to the climate. In the United States, for example, it is estimated that if every household replaced just one regular light bulb with an LED, it would prevent the emissions of approximately 2.5 million tons of greenhouse gases — the emissions equivalent to taking about 550,000 cars off the road. Replace all those bulbs, and the emissions reductions would be even greater.

The Academy also noted that LEDs are helping improve the quality of life for more than 1.5 billion people around the world who don’t have access to electricity grids. Because the LED bulbs have such low power requirements, they don’t need grids; they can be powered by cheap, small, solar panels. And because powering the lights doesn’t require non-renewable, costly fossil fuels, the solar panel pays for itself over time, and electricity generated is eventually free — both monetarily and emissions-wise.

Clean LED lights have already been helping transform rural areas in India, as noted by a ThinkProgress report from Uttar Pradesh in July. There, dairy farmers are using LED lanterns powered by solar to milk their cows before sunrise; women who weave saris are using them to work longer hours and make extra money; and students are using them to study at night.

LED lights have also helped decrease the emissions of a substance known as “black carbon,” or soot, a particle that makes climate change worse by temporarily changing the energy makeup of the earth. In Uganda, for example, researchers discovered that the kerosene lamps widely used there were major emitters of black carbon. That problem was easily solved by replacing the lamps with cheap LED replacements.
Old 10-08-2014, 06:59 PM
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The oil lamp was a key light source for 17,000 years? Wow, that's some solid technology right there.
Old 10-30-2014, 08:03 PM
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New rev Cree LED 60W equiv $8 at HD
Cree introduces shatter-proof LED lightbulbs for less than $8 a piece | 9to5Toys
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Old 10-30-2014, 08:45 PM
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sweet
Old 11-03-2014, 11:03 PM
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I joined the club!

I bought one OSRAM 800 lumen (8.5w) soft white LED because I didn't like the color of the CFL I had and I figured might as well go LED. Then after I installed it I noticed how ugly my light fixture was so I replaced that. I almost bought one of those light fixtures that has the little LEDs built-in and isn't replaceable from lowes but I didn't want a bright white color so I passed on that.

Ended up buying a 2nd OSRAM 800 lumen LED because my new light fixture takes two but since I figured that'd be too much light I also bought a dimmer switch to go with it.

I also went waaaay overboard (it's the captain planet in me) and I had noticed that my lights in my fridge were still using 40w incandescent bulbs, and I initially tried to replace them with bright white CFLs and for some reason they wouldn't work in my fridge light fixtures. I've seen this before, CFLs for some reason or another won't work in some light fixtures so I tried the LED I had on me and it worked in my fridge. Also I may've been in some trouble if one of those CFLs had broken inside my fridge and contaminated it with mercury so good thing I didn't do that! So I went back and replaced my 2x40w fridge lights with 2x6w LEDs. Yeah I just spent $20 for lights in my fuckin fridge. But hey, every time I open that fridge door it's using 68 watts less!

Last edited by #1 STUNNA; 11-03-2014 at 11:08 PM.
Old 11-03-2014, 11:31 PM
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If they ever figure this out then LEDs could be more efficient and cheaper!

A Definitive Explanation for LED Droop? - IEEE Spectrum


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