Light up your life!

Anybody here an expert on whether the claims by the LED bulb manufacturers are right? That the lumens from led need to be multiplied by 2.2 to get the "perceived" brightness that our eyes see?

Also, so far, the best LED bulbs use 6W for a 60W bulb equivalent. For this manufacturer to get 100W from 4.5W is a major jump forward. Has led design come on that much?

Also, there is a $127 million reward in the states for the manufacturer who comes up with an led 60W bulb replacement with the following conditions

*
Efficacy of more than 90 lumens per watt, which exceeds the efficiency of all incandescent and most compact fluorescent sources today, which range from 10 to 60 lumens per watt
*
Energy consumption of less than 10 watts as compared to a 60 Watt incandescent.
*
Output of more than 900 lumens, equivalent to a 60 Watt incandescent light bulb
*
Lifetime of more than 25,000 hours, which is 25X greater than a typical incandescent bulb
*
Color Rendering Index (CRI) greater than 90, which is a high measure of lighting quality
*
Color Temperature between 2700 – 3000 Kelvin, which is “warm” white light comparable to that of incandescent sources

So far only Philips has submitted a bulb which matches all the conditions which uses 9W so again, I a suspicious of the ocuk bulbs claims of 100W equivalent for only 4.5W.
 
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Come on, one of the Dons come and admit what a ****ed up fail this was, its only right.

If that happens we should all buy some out of pity :)


I bet an OcUK office junior bought them all from a guy in the pub, hoping his 'flawless' deal would get him to the top of the OcUK ladder overnight! Or maybe the work experience lad misclicked on the wholesaler's web site.
 
Just spotted something else.

Emprex claim 5W on their specs on their site and 80% energy saving over a normal standard bulb.

Doesn't that mean they are comparing it to a 25W standard bulb? Surely if it was as bright as a 100W or even 60W bulb they would be claiming 95% or 89% saving?

LED will take over eventually. At least Cree and Phillips have LED bulbs which are omnidirectional and not just 180 degrees but at 9W for 60W equivalent and £30 they are not worth paying out for yet.

Oh and one last thing, the average rated life of 35,000 hours is only for the led controller chip if you check. That doesn;t mean that all or some of the individual LED might fail long before then ;)
 
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my led lenser torch uses 1 LED blub, 240lumen output for 4 triple A batteries

with the focussed beam it reaches about 300meters crazy thing
 
i think i understand what are they claiming

lets say it does do 15years on a LED blub.

with energy saving blubs you will replace them 3 times in that cycle

LEDs run on less power


normal light blubs replaced every few months on continous use at 50p a blub
 
There is one thing they are claiming short though. 35000 hours equates to 35 times the lifespan of a normal bulb so it should be 35 years.
 
I just found a picture of these bulbs in use in a normal living room,, they really are bright!

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my led lenser torch uses 1 LED blub, 240lumen output for 4 triple A batteries

with the focussed beam it reaches about 300meters crazy thing

Yeah but even that uses 5W and so for a 60W standard bulb equivalent it would use almost 20W
 
Im seeing a future for these with Audi, they can stick 24 of them on the front of the new A8.

Or buy 1 get 23 free and il stick them in the garden.
 
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