HelisandHarleys
Well-known member
Anyone have LED fixtures instead of fluorescents or incandescent? Talk to me!
BTW, the LED T8 bulbs I used cost me $42 each, so a bit pricey, but for me worth it. The good news is that they have a newer brighter version for $36.50 now!
here's a link: http://www.amazon.com/dp/B004BLH714/?tag=atomicindus08-20
I'm planning to go all LED thru the whole house, but as they are still pricey I am doing it a bit at a time. So far I got a good 40 some odd feet of the thin LED strip lighting in cool white for my workbench overhead lighting. Attached the stuff to the bottom of my gladiator cabinets. Have one section to do still but loving it so far even though the bench isn't done yet enough to actually do any work on it yet.

I looked at the Amazon lights and they lack the key data one needs to understand before choosing them, namely the amount of lumens they create, and the color temperature.
When basic data isn't listed, I click right through listings like that.
Anyone have LED fixtures instead of fluorescents or incandescent? Talk to me!
Thanks- they are rated at 2100 lumens, against the ones I have now which are supposed to be 2500.
But like HP numbers, I am skeptical of manufacturer-supplied data. I have LED bulbs in my can lights in the office and had to replace one a year or so ago. The new one- supposedly identical to the older ones- is noticeably brighter. I assume the old ones are losing their brightness over time.
What do you think about this in comparison to what y'all was saying http://www.usa.lighting.philips.com...duraLED_T8_Specifier_Series_for_End_Users.pdf
so the led tubes are lower in lumens, but led's are more directional than fluorescent tubes. i wonder how they compare when you're talking about effective light..
so the led tubes are lower in lumens, but led's are more directional than fluorescent tubes.
i wonder how they compare when you're talking about effective light..
Without knowing exactly how those Philips tubes are constructed, it is next to impossible to say how well they might work in a specific application.
you guys are getting waaaay too deep here. the pictures of those tubes pretty much show how the grid of LEDs are arranged. and i can tell you as someone who has 8 of these they are pretty much as pictured; a grid of LEDs on one side that point down (provided you orient it correctly when you install them)
it's $35 bucks each now...
Here's 4 for $133, http://www.amazon.com/dp/B008YCFXS0/?tag=atomicindus08-20
So I'm coming up on doing all-new electrical in my 20x30 detached garage that only had a couple outlets and a single overhead light before. I want to install up to 12 4' fixtures. If I were to go for LED lighting, the cheapest solution seems to be these T8 bulbs from Amazon.
However, I don't even have any light fixtures yet. The last thing I want to do is buy a bunch of T8 fixtures and throw away the ballast. Anybody know where to get fixtures without ballasts?
Here's another thing to consider with LED vs linear fluorescent: the LEDs might not actually be any better.
So if your shop decision is CFL vs LED, go with LED. However, if your shop decision is linear fluorescent vs LED, you probably should still go with linear fluorescent. Of all 3 technologies to light a homeowner or small business shop right now, T8s are the clear winner on cost and perform as well as anything else on the market.
Seen these on the amazon link, the ad
so this will work from 85v to 277v?
I don't know much about led
http://www.ledglobalsupply.com/t8-led-bulbs/4-foot-t8-3014-led-fluorescent-white-85-277v/