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Brian Gaff Brian Gaff is offline
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Default The wrong kind of light

Yes. These days I cannot see enough to worry about light for seeing but when
they first came out it was obvious that they were very odd. Now most people
I know look around for those rare very white ones so it can be done, and
really as the colour of the light is rather important as you have said, it
seems totally daft to go on using such a bad example.
Many might suggest its a ploy to get people to buy add in light like desk
lamps as these do seem to use whiter lights.
Brian

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"Arfa Daily" wrote in message
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"Brian Gaff" wrote in message
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Why is it that when one wants cfls, one is forced to have the weird light
output that many find hazy and hard to see in? I'd have thought that the
really white phosphoreds would add very little to the cost and be much
better for lighting purposes, or is the cream/green/yellow fuzzy one
very much more efficient or something?
It even makes my eyes feel tired even though I cannot see in it.

Brian

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Blind user, so no pictures please!


I really don't know what it is about CFLs over linear flourescents. I have
absolutely no problem whatsoever seeing under incandescents or linears of
any colour persuasion, neither do I find their light objectionable in any
way. However, I hate the sickly light that CFLs generate, and have great
trouble reading under them. None of them of any colour temperature or CRI
seem to suit me. About the only thing that I can say is that they use a
tricolour phosphor mix, and this produces a highly discontinuous spectrum
compared to daylight or incandescent light, but then the spectrum from
linear flourescents isn't very clever, either.

Lots of people will now jump on the thread and say that they can't see
anything at all wrong with CFLs, and that the light from them is perfect
etc etc. Maybe this is true for them, and I'm sure most people, but it is
not for me, and apparently Brian. I do have a degree of colour blindness,
and maybe it's this, combined with the 'holey' spectrum, that combines to
make their light objectionable to me.

On a more practical level, I tried putting one in my bench light a while
back. Unfortunately, it was worse than useless for what I do (electronic
service work), as the discontinuous spectrum played havoc with being able
to correctly identify resistor colour code bands. Orange was barely
distinguishable from brown and sometimes red, and blue, green and grey
were also a problem with some resistor types. I have no such problems
working under incandescent light.

Arfa