Posted on 01/23/2012 10:01:01 PM PST by Rabin
Most people have incandescent (in-can-DESS-ent) light bulbs in their house. These bulbs get very hot and use a lot of energy.
(Excerpt) Read more at tvakids.com ...
Stick it in your socket TVA!
Stick it in your socket TVA!
Stick it in your socket TVA!
Don't forget to buy lamp sockets as well! I have been told that the mercury laden pieces of crap will have a smaller base, so it might not be a bad idea to buy the current incandescent sockets to fit all those bulbs you are hoarding.
BTW, pretty impressive collection! I am only up to 100 100W and about 50 Three Way 100-200-250's!
Depends on what you buy. If you buy el-cheapo CFL's, they won't last 13X, but they certainly last more than 2X. And you can get CFL's with the same "color temperature" as incandescents, so "quality of light" isn't an issue. We've replaced pretty much all our incandescents, except in the wife's bathroom and our outdoor lights.
You would be arrested (uh-RESS-ted) and detained as a terrorist (TEE-bag-ger) indefinitely without charges or trial.
I so want to go to the capital and throw a box of them onto the senate floor...just to see how they would react.
After they coward into a corner they would charge you as a terriost.
I have two wall lamps in a hall way, about 10 feet apart that have 100 watt incandescent bulbs that have never been changed since we moved into the house in December 1992. They get regular, if not “heavy” usage, on for awhile, off for awhile. They are G.E. bulbs and I’d be willing to sell them to the government to study if the price is right.
I really don’t have a clue why they have lasted so long.
Resist...Resist...Resist. You know what to do.
And just wait until we start hearing about all the mercury contamination in the landfills from thrown away CF bulbs in about 20 years. More Superfund galore!!!
"KMA"!
CC
CC
I have two wall lamps in a hall way, about 10 feet apart that have 100 watt incandescent bulbs that have never been changed since we moved into the house in December 1992. They get regular, if not heavy usage, on for awhile, off for awhile. They are G.E. bulbs and Id be willing to sell them to the government to study if the price is right. I really dont have a clue why they have lasted so long.Mechanical shock and vibration greatly reduced because they're firmly attached to your house; can't move when they're on. That's one reason.
Lifetime of incandescents is strongly influenced by the temperature at which they operate; this in turn is strongly influenced by the voltage they "see" at their sockets. I don't remember the exact figures, but it's something like a 5% decrease in operating voltage increases lifetime by, like, a factor of 10. Of course, that 5% drop also decreases the "efficacy" of the bulb, where "efficacy" is defined (by G.E., anyway) as the amount of usable (that is visible) light emitted per watt of power input.
Those are two of the factors behind the "hundred year bulb" that burns at the Livermore Fire Station. It runs cool, and it's attached to the structure of the building.
Another is that it was built super well, before cost-cutting and efficincy considerations trimmed every milli-cent from the cost of a bulb.
I have two wall lamps in a hall way, about 10 feet apart that have 100 watt incandescent bulbs that have never been changed since we moved into the house in December 1992. They get regular, if not heavy usage, on for awhile, off for awhile. They are G.E. bulbs and Id be willing to sell them to the government to study if the price is right. I really dont have a clue why they have lasted so long.
Oh, I forgot to finish...
With regard to your hall lamps, there may be some reason why the particular circuit that supplies those two bulbs is loaded down just a bit more than usual (perhaps it's a long run from your fuse/breaker box), thereby reducing the voltage to those lamps just a bit. A reduction of just a couple of volts would be enough to substantially increase the lifetime of the bulbs.
Another factor (you may have heard of this one) is that incandescent bulb lifetime is affected by the number of times the lamp is turned on and off. Perhaps the hall lamps are just tuned on and off once a day. Or, if you live in a vast mansion, maybe they're never turned off. That'd be nice.
“Just let the big box stores deal with disposal.”
Your local Sierra Club is the disposal point for all mercury bulbs.
The club also takes old tires, used motor oil, old appliances and dirty cat litter.
Simply pull in your filled pick-up to any Sierra Club on any weekend. If they are closed, dump your recyclable trash on the front lawn.
Thank you.
Damned government has no business telling us what we can buy, anyway.
Up their rear end. I have half the shelf in my outside building (over four feet) full of bulbs of various wattage and two boxes on a shelf in the garage full of bulbs.
As if...I live where I want every heat source I can find. It wouldn’t be the first time I ever warmed my hands over a lightbulb, and so help me, it won’t be the last!
Thanks for the socket tip.
I didn’t mention my stash of 3 ways and 100 watt floods for my ceiling cans.
“When I was a kid many years ago, I can remember the garbage men throwing four foot tube fluorescents in the trucks. People had them in kitchen ceiling fixtures. They (and we) loved to hear them pop and release a cloud of phosphors. They also had a lot more mercury than present CFLs. The trucks were contaminated back then, and probably worse.”
Okay, I have confession to make. Waaaay back when I was 12, a convenience store on the outskirts of town was stacking their burnt-out 8 foot bulbs behind the store. I discovered over a hundred bulbs there, awaiting good use. I found they made really cool spears that gave a very satisfying pop when thrown against the store’s back wall. It didn’t take long to chuck a hundred spears.
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