DarrenSL said:
Good point! The floor to ceiling height is 2.36m but bath to ceiling is obviously shorter.
Eitherway, looking at the lights again they're zone 1 compatable.
http://www.lightsaver.co.uk/shop/?page=main_shop.php&whichmenu=bathlig&scrollcat=SL
At £10 each with no transformer required, they seem a bargain to me.
FYI - the wiring regulation say that unless you cannot reasonably install them elsewhere you may not put them in Zone 1.
So, back to the original post ... what advantage do dichromic lamps have (other than lifetime)?
Dichroic refers to the type of lamp envelope, and is nothing to do with whether it is ELV or LV - you can get ELV dichroic and non-dichroic, and ditto LV.
For LV halogen lamps there are 2 common types of base, GZ10 and GU10.
GZ10 lamps are the dichroic (cool beam) type, where a lot of heat comes out of the back, and GU10s have internal reflectors (the lamps are also known as PARxx - Parabolic Aluminium Reflector<size>) where the heat comes out forwards.
If you look you'll see that you can put a GU10 lamp in a GZ10 fitting, but not the other way around. This was done so that you couldn't put a dichroic lamp into a luminaire designed for PAR lamps, as the rearward-reflected heat would damage it.
Well guess what - people have now started making dichroic GU10s
If a luminaire has a GU10 base, then unless the instructions explicitly say otherwise, you must only use PAR GU10s in it, not dichroic.
The same rule would apply to ELV luminaires.
Be warned that a PAR lamp directly above someone standing in a bath might be uncomfortably hot.