Posted on 07/31/2023 8:49:05 AM PDT by algore
The Biden Administration will implement a ban on incandescent light bulbs starting next week in favor of energy-efficient bulbs, following a yearslong bipartisan effort to phase out the bulbs after earlier regulations and standards were blocked by former President Donald Trump.
The Department of Energy approved new rules for light bulbs last year that will take effect on August 1, including a new minimum standard for light bulbs at 45 lumens—or brightness—per watt, an increase over the average 12 to 18 lumens per watt for incandescent bulbs.
Retailers will be prohibited from selling any bulbs—including incandescent bulbs—that don’t match the new standard, though households using any existing bulb that does not meet the standard will not be required to stop using them.
The decision was meant to conserve energy and “help consumers save on their energy bills,” as more energy-efficient bulbs—like LEDs—use at least 75% less energy and last up to 25 times longer than incandescent bulbs, according to the department.
An effort to phase out less efficient bulbs was initiated by former President George W. Bush, whose Energy Independence and Security Act in 2007 called for household light bulbs to have “about 25% greater efficiency,” though it did not outright ban incandescent bulbs, according to the Environmental Protection Agency.
Former President Barack Obama added two new regulations to the act in 2017, which would have effectively phased out incandescent bulbs and other specialty bulbs, like candle-shaped bulbs used in chandeliers, by January 2020, according to the EPA.
The Department of Energy later blocked the regulations during Trump’s presidency in 2019, after Trump—who said energy-efficient bulbs Americans were “being forced to use” made him “look orange”
(Excerpt) Read more at msn.com ...
“all these newfangled non-Edison bulbs throw off the human eye color charts. ask any photographer to e plain what i mean.”
LOL! With incandescent we had to switch to indoor film.
I’d be happy to send you a box of “failed way early” LED bulbs if you’ll cover the shipping.
My latest was one of those folding section “garage” lights. It was great through last winter. But in late March IIRC, the days were a bit warmer: The inadequate heat sinking and ambient temperatures more like 80 deg. F near the ceiling made the light run so hot that plastic parts of the “leaves” fried, and most sections of the LED’s burned out too.*
*I’d have to go pull it out - this may be another one where solder melted and ran off the LED elements solder joints.
Hey, don’t believe me - go on YouTube and find dozens of vids of people repairing / attempting to repair LED bulbs that farted out in this manner.
Now, “big brand name” (say, GE) LED bulbs usually hold up well - I have some that are at least 10 years old now and got lots of use. They’ve lost about half their brightness, but, that’s actually not bad - most bulb types’ lumen output diminishes substantially with long use. Another advantage is that LEDs (at least good quality LED bulbs) don’t care about being turned on and off thousands or even tens of thousands of times. Great for bathroom lights!
Also, I added additional heat sinking to another one of those folding lights. According to my temperature “gun” that got the operating temperature in ~80 deg. surroundings down to around 200 deg. F, and so far the light is holding up. :-) The heat sinks, screws, and heat conductive paste probably cost me as much as the light did, tho’. :-(
“Incandescent bulbs have the fewest health risks and are the safest type of lightbulb.”
The Most Overlooked Fire Hazard In Your Home
https://www.familyhandyman.com/article/the-most-overlooked-fire-hazard-at-home/
“They are also way less expensive. This more than double’s the cost of a lightbulb.”
They last way longer than 2x incandescent. That alone makes them cheaper. Then there is the electricity savings!
High-quality LED lighting lamps can last a very, very long time. Cheap dollar store or unbranded versions can go dark in less time than an incandescent. I’ve have both types.
last up to 25 times longer than incandescent bulbs, according to the department.
Bravo Sierra. Ours burn out at about the same rate as the incandescents.
BTW, reminds me of the Last Man Standing episode where Mike and Chuck went to the hardware store looking for contraband incandescents - code word “strawberries”. Classic.
“i have bought enough Edison light bulbs to last a few years at least. Im 71 so i dont need all those newfangled bulbs, that rape your wallet, too.”
How do they rape your wallet when they save you money!
Not to mention the labor savings.
Yes, that is a good point. I’m hopefully old enough that I’ll never have to buy a car with such ridiculously expensive headlights. (And granted that similar cost inflation applies now to many other car parts.)
“LEDs are now available with their own dusk to dawn light sensors.”
Don’t use ‘em. My front porch lite has been on 24/7/365 for over a decade. Turning any lite bulb off and on repeatedly shortens its life.
The idiot brigade thinks the gop is going to sweep into congress and save the day……
Heat lamps are exempted. They aren’t primarily “(visible) light producers”. If you’re nervous about it anyway, Amazon has lots of them today.
Also, that PSTUPID REP. from Michigan who’s niece is a super model, pushed it years ago....I thought it was a DEAD ISSUE!
“Bravo Sierra. Ours burn out at about the same rate as the incandescents.”
Don’t buy junk. We have had ZERO failures of FEIT bulbs over several years.
Nice when you are 76 with 13 ft ceilings!
I’ve had good luck with FEIT except one batch of 100w equivalent FEITs that were awful (failed early, every one.) Might have been a QC slip-up, as I never got around to checking how hot they were running. (Overheating would likely be a design screw-up.) All were in open fixtures, normal ambient (under 90 deg. F) temperatures.
Exactly and this comes from the Klaus Schwab commies. WEF’ers need to be hung.
“Turning any lite bulb off and on repeatedly shortens its life.”
We have a utility room from the garage to the kitchen/hall/dining room. We replaced the long fluorescent bulbs with LEDs and replaced one of the 2-way switches with a motion sensor switch.
Any movement in the hall or kitchen also sets it off. Going on 3 years of activating 15-20 times a day and still going strong.
Hung a long-array LED garage light with motion sensor. Turns on/of many times a day. Still strong after years.
” Turning any lite bulb off and on repeatedly shortens its life.”
We have two strings of low-wattage landscape LED flood lights that turn on/off each day. No failures.
Aside from overheating, I suspect cheapies also don’t have much in the way of electrical spike suppression in them. I had even worse problems with some electronic ballast T40 fluorescents* — electrical spikes would zap ‘em. I have a whole stack of the fixtures. Some I convert them into low intensity heaters, but now I’m also thinking of converting some to the LED tubes designed to work in fluorescent fixtures with the ballasts removed. The nice thing there is that one can get 48” LED tubes that actually consume 40 watts or so and are very bright. Great for a shop light mounted on a high ceiling.
(Maybe the failure rate wasn’t worse, but getting to them was — all mounted high or very high.)
“I’d be happy to send you a box of “failed way early” LED bulbs if you’ll cover the shipping.”
Do you take PayPal? Post your bank routing and account numbers, please.
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