Green Building Bible, Fourth Edition |
These two books are the perfect starting place to help you get to grips with one of the most vitally important aspects of our society - our homes and living environment. PLEASE NOTE: A download link for Volume 1 will be sent to you by email and Volume 2 will be sent to you by post as a book. |
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Posted By: WillInAberdeen"Today’s plans also include a ban from September [2022?2023?] on the sale of lighting fixtures with fixed bulbs that can’t be replaced – meaning the fixtures have to be thrown away."I've come across a number of light fittings recently with 'integrated LEDS' that are 'replaceable by an electrician', or similar. So I guess that may be a dodge to get around the ban?
Posted By: WillInAberdeenFluorescent lights are soon going to be
a thing of the past. The Reduction of
Hazardous Substances (RoHS) directive of
the European Union restricts the use ...
Posted By: Simon StillThe Crompton ones need you to rewire your fitting and remove the ballastWould that need Part P?
Posted By: borpinGood question. Dunno about the theoretical answer, but I do know the practical onePosted By: Simon StillThe Crompton ones need you to rewire your fitting and remove the ballastWould that need Part P?
Or just a 'competent person'?
Posted By: Simon StillI'm a bit more 'meh' about this. having 240v fittings with drivers packed into a tiny space in each individual bulb is pretty crap - in the 8 years we've been here I've had to replace quite a number of GU10 LED bulbs and they're difficult/unreliable to dim.Hmm, we've been here for coming up to 8 years and I haven't had to replace a single one of the 50 or so Crompton GU10 LEDs I have. But I deliberately don't buy dimming varieties, so maybe that's it. Just the metal-bodied COB ones.
Posted By: revorI recently replaced 6 5' fluorescent tubes in my workshop and office a few weeks ago with LED tubes. Each came with a starter you replaced the existing one with it. About £8 plus VAT each got them from Rexel also available at CEF and other places. They start up straight away and full brightness dead pleased great improvement on the old and save energy and dead easy to fit. Make was Osram and are 20w 2200lmCare to post a link? Exactly what I need to do.
Posted By: borpinCare to post a link? Exactly what I need to do.
Posted By: djhHmm, we've been here for coming up to 8 years and I haven't had to replace a single one of the 50 or so Crompton GU10 LEDs I have. But I deliberately don't buy dimming varieties, so maybe that's it. Just the metal-bodied COB ones.
Posted By: Simon StillTheres been a lot of bullshit about saving money with LED replacements for fluorescents as they're already really efficient - theres almost certainly a negative environmental impact of replacing them before they fail.
These t5 tubeshttps://www.any-lamp.co.uk/philips-master-tl5-he-35w-840-cool-white-145cm-8711500639523?" rel="nofollow" >https://www.any-lamp.co.uk/philips-master-tl5-he-35w-840-cool-white-145cm-8711500639523?
Are £3.90, 24000hours, 95 lumens per watt.
The link above gets you 108 lumens per watt, the same estimated life and they're £16
Posted By: Simon StillTheres been a lot of bullshit about saving money with LED replacements for fluorescents as they're already really efficientAgreed. Specifically T5 triphosphor fluorescents have been better than anything else I've seen until very recently. CFLs and T8 halophosphates not so much. I gather the latest regs are designed to reduce the mercury that might leak into the environment rather than improve efficiency. But I agree about not replacing until they fail.
I'm no longer dimming any of mine but have still had failures in our kitchen table lights since. Those bulbs are downward facing in a concrete fitting so theres no ventilation. I suspect they run hot and that's what shortens their life.Could well be. Most of mine are in open mounts so the lamp is exposed to the air. John Lewis Keely or similar. But the ones in shower rooms etc are enclosed and haven't failed either. Downward facing concrete sounds like pretty much worst case.
Posted By: revor
I'll bear them in mind but do they come full brightness straight away. I.
Posted By: djhCFLs and T8 halophosphates not so much.
Posted By: djhDownward facing concrete sounds like pretty much worst case.For sure. but I'm guessing would probably have killed halogens quickly as well.
Posted By: revorhttps://www.cef.co.uk/catalogue/products/4513537-23w-t8-5ft-led-tube-glass-6500kThanks.
Posted By: borpinInterestingly that doesn't go to an Osmram tube.
Posted By: revorThe links were to give you a choice.Thanks. I Thought I'd misunderstood.
Posted By: Simon StillIt's 2200 lm. The Osram 58W T8 fluroescent tube they sell is 5000 lumenI did wonder, though often LEDs do seem brighter.
Posted By: borpinI did wonder, though often LEDs do seem brighter.
Posted By: revorI recently replaced 6 5' fluorescent tubes in my workshop and office a few weeks ago with LED tubes.
Posted By: revorMake was Osram and are 20w 2200lmDid you find this was a like for like in terms of actual light? Were they the standard 58W tubes originally?
Posted By: borpinDid you find this was a like for like in terms of actual light? Were they the standard 58W tubes originally?
Posted By: borpinI did wonder, though often LEDs do seem brighter.
My tubes are EOL so I need to find a replacement.
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