CFL bulbs

gbrady

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I replaced all the bulbs in my garage with the New CFL , the old incandescent had been in the garage for two years. Since then I have replaced the CFL twice in the last five months. Are there any brands that will last longer? Glenn
 
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If they are in a place they will take a beating, or exposed to moisture- stick with a heavy duty incandescent, as those cfl things won't hold up under such. They do make weather resistant cfl lights (floodlights), but they still won't take any abuse, and are very expensive.

I have one cfl floodlight- I'm keeping the receipt and paper from package from where I bought it, and will promptly return for refund/replacement when and if it burns out within the time alloted. I'd suggest everyone do the same, as these things are too expensive not to be returned every time they go out under warranty. I just now thought about the cold weather and how it won't work. :(

Even LED's (which are very expensive when getting up to equivalent wattages to get the light needed) don't hold up well to vibrations according to the reviews when used in "hard use" applications.

Efficient lighting is only efficient when it works- it's really efficient when it doesn't. :D
 
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A couple of years agi I bought an eleven year bulb at RadioShack. It's in an outside light that's gone through some pretty extreme temps. After a bit more than two years it's still going strong.
 
My garage is unheated and Iowa Is always damp so I will just go back to the old style..
 
I worked at the fire station where the worlds longest burning light bulb is located.They don't make them like this anymore.110 years of continous service !It has been there for my entire career and a few others/

Livermore's Centennial Light
 
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I hate those CFL bulbs, if cold they take forever to light up. I was out grilling some steaks the other night (5 degrees) and not only was my propane lantern not very bright the CFL on the porch never got bright. I nearly burned the steaks, which would have really made me mad.

I worked at the fire station where the worlds longest burning light bulb is located

How did they keep it lit when they moved it to the new station? I remember back in the 80's when I was stationed at Moffett Field it was a big deal then whenever it burned another year.

bob
 
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Just to ask, is the bulb being run vertically or horizontally? Since CFLs are self ballasted, you can have some issues between the bulb jacket (or 'coil' in the case of a CFL). Sometimes, in a horizontal situation, the jacket can seperate from the ballast (in cheaper or heavier models, like the 250w+) and you've got a busted bulb.

I've run them for years and years and absolutely love them.

Just remember, you want to purchase the ACTUAL wattage output, not just something advertised as 'equivalent too xyz watts'

I'm sorry I can't recommend a particular brand, the ones I use are for different applications than room lighting..
 
If the bulbs are out in the open then yes they will fail, but if there in a fixture of some sort they should last longer than that. You should try out a different brand and always keep your receipt and package most places offer a 90 day return/refund. The packaging on most states they will refund or replace the defective product but who's going to mail a light bulb? I switched to cfl's long ago some will last years and some last months. Remember that we live in a place that 80% of stuff is made or assembled (over there) and the stuff here is starting to match their quality standards. The term "nothing lasts forever" is more evident todays times.
 
I replaced all the bulbs in my garage with the New CFL , the old incandescent had been in the garage for two years. Since then I have replaced the CFL twice in the last five months. Are there any brands that will last longer? Glenn

Why even do that in the first place? The old bulbs work just fine out in my garage, most have been there for years. Same for the house. I bought enough of the old ones to last me a lifetime when the wackos make us change over in a couple of years.
 
This isn't hard use, but over the past three years I've replaced every incandescent bulb in this old farm house with CFLs as the older bulbs have worn out. I've gotten used to the slight delay when you flip the switch, and I've noticed about a $10/month decrease in the electricity bill -- down from around $70 to around $60 a month. The bulbs have been the only change, so I'm attributing the savings to them. I still use conventional flood lights on the outside of the house and barn.


Bullseye
 
I used to replace the conventional type bulbs on the outside lights continuously,,,front door, side door, over the garage door and side windows, etc.

Sometimes they wouldn't last a week. I tried all the different types of HD bulbs, etc and nothing lasted.

I put the cfl type in all those locations over 5 years ago. So far only one has burned out.
The package says they're not rated for outdoors but they hold up just fine it seems..

They do not however burn as bright in the colder weather but for some illumination around the place they're just fine.,,and I don't have to climb the ladder all the time.

I've put them inside in many locations/rooms and so far none of those has failed in 4+ yrs of constant use dispite the turn on/off problems reported by may users.
All the outdoor installs (5 total) are on photocells for on at dusk and off at dawn. Only 2 of those are inside a glass covering. The other 3 on the garage just hang downward at an angle from the outdoor socket (which is supposed to shorten their life).

No good for bench lighting though. Just not the right light for working, so it's still alot of fluorescents over head and a couple of swing lamps with 100w conventional in them.

What used to really last was bulbs from traffic lights. I used to get them from a friend that worked on a County Traffic Signal crew. They had a regular schedule of replacement for those after so many hours of use. They all still worked fine and stood up to most anything. All were 40W IIRC and clear glass,,but the price was right!
They used to toss the bulbs into the landfill by the truck load anyway. What a waste.
No more free bulbs though as everything is LED or someother such techology.
 
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Like a lot of folks I bought into all the hype about CFL bulbs and replaced every incandescent bulb in the house with those things. Within a few months they began to fail at a cost of about $7 each! I did some online research and found out that there is a lot of difference in the quality of CFL's and they don't do well in applications where they are turned on and off frequently - you know, like in your house! Apparently I needed to buy even more expensive CFL's and leave them on all the time to "enjoy" all the benefits of this new technology. Now when one burns out, it gets replaced with one of those old fashioned, inefficient, cheap incandescent bulbs.
 
Remember you will have a Haz Mat situation if you drop and break a CFL bulb.

The Livermore light bulb was unpowered for the trip from the old fire station to the new one.Only time it has been unpowered.It now has a dedicated generator to supply power during outages.
 
I've used CFLs in my garage for 16 years. I think I've gone through four or five. Attached, unheated garage, with Oklahoma temps and humidity, hanging straight down and uncovered. However, we NEVER turn it off. Cycling the light on and off, whether CFL or incandescent, will shorten the life.

I also have a CFL in the porch light, which is enclosed in a lantern-like fixture. It burns for three or four hours a night when I'm home, and sometimes all night when I'm gone. It's close to two years old and still going. When I used incandescents out there, I had to change them every three to four months.

However, I've found some places they don't work well, too. Over the cooktop in the kitchen seems to be too hot and humid, as the two I tried didn't last a month each. I also put some in the bathroom where we average three showers a day, and they didn't last long, either.
 
I use pretty much all CFL's. One on the front porch in a glass globe. Two mounted in reflectors like for camera lighting on the back porch. All three are 40 or 60 watts (actually drawing 17-20). One on the back lights the Flag. The other lights porch. They never get turned off. In winter below 25 degrees they put out only about 1/3rd capacity. When I used inc. floods outside I was buying new ones every three months. Inside all are CFL. I don't like that you can't put a dimmer on them but I have only replaced one CFL in 3 yrs..
 
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I have already started stocking up on 3 way and 100w incadescent, they won't be available forever you know. :( ;)

The Livermore light bulb was unpowered for the trip from the old fire station to the new one

I bet there was some serious pucker factor during that move and when it came time to turn it back on! :D

bob
 
CFL's = not ready for prime time:
Take way too long to fire.
Burn out almost instantly in cold weather.
Very poor color rendition.
Even in prime conditions have short lifespan.
Take way too long to fire.

I use incandescents because of the above and because it makes the Greenies cry.:D

I have stocked enough incandescents to last until LED technology in household lighting becomes stable. LED technology is moving very rapidly and will make CFL's look like a failed junior highschool lab experiment. LED is the wave of the future and will crush the farce that is CFL.
 

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