Interesting ...
mike wrote:
I've never had a CFL failure that I could trace to the CFL.
** Really? That puts you in a minority of one.
The most common CFL failure is the tube heaters going open - most are rated for only 1 to 2 thousand switch on cycles. Ones that light up quickly and tolerate low temps better seem to be the poorest at this.
All other failures I have seen are the result of the electronics section running too hot causing capacitor failure, particularly electro and EMI suppression caps.
A great many ceiling fixtures are not well suited to CFL or LED lamps cos they trap heat.
It's always the electronics driving it.
** Not true in general.
A power glitch can take
out a LED just as easily as a CFL.
** Power glitch = what ??
A line voltage spike lasting less than a mS or a hit by lighting ?
The typically 4 to 22uF electro in the DC supply absorbs brief spikes nicely and most indirect effects of lightning too.
..... Phil
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