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Compact Fluorescent

Mar 03, 2008 11:05


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Comments 10

stickcow March 3 2008, 17:12:36 UTC
You can get full spectrum CFL, for about $5 a bulb. I prefer full spectrum to yellow bulbs.

We use the CFL bulbs in places like the kitchen, laundry room, bathrooms, playroom, kids rooms.

I use full spectrum bulbs in other places where I spend a lot of time.

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stickcow March 3 2008, 17:14:38 UTC
A quick google shows that you can get get dimmable CFLs.

Also, the warm up time, you get used to it, I don't really notice. It's not nearly as bad as the warmup on a florescent tube.

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eliset March 3 2008, 18:18:15 UTC
Yeah, we have dimmable bulbs in our kitchen. They do take a while to warm up, and the color we've had to get used to. But they do exist!

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ivo March 3 2008, 19:40:13 UTC
Can you point me to some models that you use or sites that sell them?

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pasketti March 3 2008, 17:39:15 UTC
What she said. If you want the full-spectrum, look for 5000K+ color on the package. I like the light those give off the best. But there are the yellowish ones too.

I didn't know that there were dimmable one, but I replaced the few dimmers we had in the house with regular switches. It just wasn't that big a deal, and I almost always kept the light on full anyway.

You can find ones that are instant-on, but it may take a little searching.

The biggest drawback for us is that those motion-sensing light switches will not work with CFs. They work fine with regular tube-fluorescents, just not with CFs. I keep wanting to replace the bathroom light switch with a motion sensor, as the kids keep leaving it on, but the two that I tried just don't work well.

But all in all, I'm very happy that I switched to CFs. Our electric bill dropped by $5-$10/month, and they paid for themselves in 6 months. There's a secondary effect in the summer, as your air conditioner no longer has to work to remove the heat generated by the light bulbs.

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paradox0220 March 3 2008, 18:07:38 UTC
Agreed. The dimming inability (with the ones we got anyways) just irritates me back to normal bulbs. I pondering seeing if there are LED lights that would work. It would make for some interesting lighting effects too as you can use different colors. I assume dimming would be done through turning off a number of the LEDs etc.

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decibel45 November 30 2009, 22:10:32 UTC
Actually, I'd hope they would just dim the LEDs.

The issue with dimming florescents is that you need a minimum amount of energy to excite the gas molecules into emitting radiation, and it's very hard to actually control that. It really wants to be either on or off. LEDs don't have that problem at all.

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goulo March 3 2008, 22:50:08 UTC
You could do a compromise/mixed approach, e.g. fluorescent in places like kitchen, bathroom, garage, and traditional light in den, bedroom. Office could have mixed, e.g. fluorescent ceiling light for overall room light, plus a smaller traditional standing or desk lamp to highlight what you're working on.

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