Thread: Bulbs
View Single Post
  #10   Report Post  
Posted to uk.d-i-y
Brian Gaff Brian Gaff is offline
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 10,998
Default Bulbs

Well one thought occurred to me. Hide a patress box with a dimmer in it
above the lighting itself, adjust to suit and leave it on and set, using the
normal switch for the on and off.
Brian

--
----- -
This newsgroup posting comes to you directly from...
The Sofa of Brian Gaff...

Blind user, so no pictures please!
"David" wrote in message
...
On Monday, November 7, 2016 at 2:59:22 PM UTC, charles wrote:
Y'know, when I was little, we had 60w bayonets and that was it, unless
you decided to go mad and get a 100w bayonet. Now I actually need to
have a written bulb inventory with which
cap/type/wattage/clear/pearl/candle/halogen/cfl/led etc for each room.
Jesus.


Anyway, I have just put up a new six-bulb ceiling lamp on the landing
(reasons of design - I am just the labourer). It has six ses halogen
clear candle 18w bulbs. That's 108w or 138w equivalent. It's a bit
too
bright. Does anyone know if I can get an ses clear candle filament
(pref
halogen) bulb with a lower wattage than 18w? I don't want to go down
the
LED filament route at this point as I'm not rich enough.


In this case Google is not my friend, it is a Moroccan street market
trader who ignores what I say and tries to sell me what it has. "Less
than 18w? Yes my friend, I have! Look! Yes, is 42w. 42w is better!
Look
it is good bulb and very cheap!"


All advice welcome. Even the advice to travel back in time and get a
lamp with fewer than six bulbs..


Fit a dimmer switch.

According to TLC's catalogue, 3w LEDs are 25% brighter than the halogen
ones you have.

--
from KT24 in Surrey, England


Thanks. The dimmer switch was mentioned and is a good idea. The only
reservation was that I remember them as a knob with push for on and off
and turn for brightness. Is there such a thing as a "normal" switch with
a variable setting for brightness??