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RickR RickR is offline
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Default Room lighting options

On Oct 30, 8:13 am, Maury Markowitz wrote:
I would like to explore some newerlightingoptions for my home. I
currently have a mix of CF's in all the non-dimmable rooms (bathrooms,
hallways, utility rooms, etc.) and a mix of old-school bulbs and
halogen pots where I need dimming (kitchen, office, livingroom).

The problem is that it's the high-wattagelightsthat are used the
most. Specifically, my kitchen, living room and office make up
something like 80% of all thelightingturned on in the house over
time. All of the otherlightscombined are turned on for maybe 2 hours
a day combined.

So it's thelightsthat are the least effiecient that are being used
the most. I'd like to hear any suggestions you might have on how to
attack this.

I have tried dimmable screw-in CF's, but they buzz terribly, give off
a green-tintedlightat lower settings, and have a very high "lowest
setting" that makes them basically useless IMHO. Perhaps there's some
good ones I could look at?

I'm also very interested in xenon, I used them for my under-counter
and I really like thelight. Are there dimmable xenons? Are there
fixtures suitable for replacing pot halogens in a room-lighting
situation?

Any other options I should consider?

Thanks!

Maury


Last First...
Xenons are dimmable, just like any other low voltage incandescent. Use
a dimmer rated for the kind of transformer you have (magnetic -
electronic) and your fine.

The best answer for the big areas is to have multiple sets of lights.
1. Have some big fluorescent fixtures (on cabinet tops, center of
room...) on a swich. (BTW screw-in CFs are less efficient than
fixtures built to be fluorescent.)
2. Have some tightly focused incandescents for the most important
areas. These can be dimmed easily and will make look nice when on by
themselves.
3. Select a few decorative fixtures, if you want and dim them
seperately.

This 3 layer trick will give many varied looks from bright to dim,
with full control and high efficiency.

The drawback is that you need to re-work most of the electrical and
maybe the fixtures too. Standard homes are not built to use newer
ideas. If that is too much money then spend your money on power. Do
the math, it may be cheaper!

Richard Reid, LC