Hardly, a 105W CFL produces approx 10W of visible light.
Yep, they are mega bright, I think it said on the box it was equal to 500watt incandescent?
it was an experiment for the chilli growing thread^watcha growing there chum?
You don't know what your talking about dude!
It's 6800lm which is ridiculously bright and as stated from the person above looking at it would hurt your eyes!
6800lm/s = 10W of light, you have confirmed what I just said...
As others have said the flickering is inherent to fluorescent lamp technology and is why when installing fluorescent lights in workshops and factorys careful planning is needed. Otherwise you get what's called strobing (Sp?) where machines appear to be stationary when in actual fact they are turned on and moving![]()
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That's actually not the case. Some CFL bulbs flicker at 50Hz just like the long fluorescent strip-lights do. The excited gaseous mix inside the tube only emits when the current is flowing through them in one way, unlike filament bulbs which have no polarity sensitivity.
In addition, some CFL's have noisy inverters which derive the High-Voltage from the mains, which causes higher-frequency flickering (between 200Hz to 5000Hz).
Only really new and quite high-end CFLs are "flicker free" and even then, that's only because they flicker faster than it is possible to detect.
Some people are a lot more sensitive to flickering than others.
6800lm/s = 10W of light, you have confirmed what I just said...
this is the first time i've heard this
unless you are talking about the old style FL which aren't operated by electronics![]()
This could explain why the strip lights at work give me headache. Even though I don't actually see the flicker?
6800lm/s = 10W of light, you have confirmed what I just said...
Lumens aren't a unit of power. Based on what I read recently:
Power = radiant flux x total steradians
Can you show me how you're working that out as my calculations say very different!
P(W) = ΦV(lm) / η(lm/W)
= 6800/60 = 113.33Watts
Even if the flicker was at 50hz your eyes/brain may do a good job of masking the effect.
Not that good a job, as its obviously running at 100% and overheating!
Can you show me how you're working that out as my calculations say very different!
P(W) = ΦV(lm) / η(lm/W)
= 6800/60 = 113.33Watts
I'm pretty sure that ALL fluorescent lamps have to be controlled by some sort of electronics as they need to generate thousands of volts to get the gas's inside the tubes to strike?!?!?!
The strobing (Sp?) effect was taught to me a few years ago when I was doing my 16th Edition City&Guilds 2330. You can use HighFrequency fluorescent lamps to prevent it but that would probably be expensive!
If the site has 3-phase you could distribute the fluorescent lighting over two phase's to prevent it and I believe another method is to use lead and lag capacitors to phase-shift pairs of fluorescent lamps![]()