You are aware there are different colour tones, i find the warm white ones nowadays are very similar to the older halogen lampsI changed the 8 spotlights in our kitchen for LED's. Mrs Mottie hates them and calls them 'kebab shop' lights.
You are aware there are different colour tones, i find the warm white ones nowadays are very similar to the older halogen lampsI changed the 8 spotlights in our kitchen for LED's. Mrs Mottie hates them and calls them 'kebab shop' lights.
Yeah, I got the bright white ones which I preferred. Should have got the warm white ones. I’m just hoping she'll 'warm' to them. It’s been over a year so far with no luck though!You are aware there are different colour tones, i find the warm white ones nowadays are very similar to the older halogen lamps
However the problem is finding which LED lamps don't flash or flicker, there are LED's with smoothing capacitors which don't flicker, and there are LED's with leak resistors which don't flash, but no requirement to put on the packaging which are which.
Yes however the war of the currents was won by George Westinghouse not [URL='https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Edison']Thomas Edison[/URL] so we have AC supply into the home, and the way bulbs are made they will often simply not work with DC as they use a capacitor as a current limiting device, so any smoothing of the DC has to be after the capacitor so inside the bulb.The problem is finding LED drivers which do not cause the LED to flicker, flash or fail prematurely.
An LED element fed from a battery with a current limiting resistor in series with the element will provide constant light. A regulated and well smoothed DC power supply can be used instead of a battery.
Have you actually tried this (with an LED 'driver'/PSU) and seen it to make a noticeable difference?Axial leaded electrolytic capacitors .... have a much better high frequency response than a radial leaded capacitor of the same value ...
I thing that statement may need some editing?... Changing the output smoothing capacitor from a radial to an axial type can result in much higher spikes and / or high frequency energy coming from the supply.
Changing the output smoothing capacitor from an AXIAL to a RADIAL type can result in much higher spikes and / or high frequency energy coming from the supply.
You're welcome - I only wish that I could notice my own typos/errors as well as I can notice those of othersAnother error by me and spotted by John
Have you actually tried this (with an LED 'driver'/PSU) and seen it to make a noticeable difference?
I have a fitting in my bathroom that takes very small halogen bulb, ill this mean i have to replace the fitting.
The quartz bulb should not be dimmed, the whole idea is the quartz is so hot the tungsten will not stick to the quartz, running them cold the tungsten coats inside of quartz which can be seen as it goes black. The glass cover over the quartz is to stop white hot quartz landing on the carpet should a bulb fracture when it blows, it is not required when using LED bulbs, however it does charge the look of the lamp without the glass cover.I deliberately stocked up on 60W tungsten G9's as the LED replacements (there are NO equivalents AFAICT) are too big to fit in the fitting, too dim and mostly non-dimmable. If anyone knows of a 10W dimmable G9 LED lamp with the same physical dimensions as a normal halogen one, please let me know.
well I tried them and they do flicker and flash when turned off.Philips master G9 2.3W No flicker apparent on any tested bulb
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