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Commander Kinsey Commander Kinsey is offline
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Default Why do LEDs generate heat?

On Sat, 05 Oct 2019 19:46:08 +0100, Mark Lloyd wrote:

On 10/4/19 2:51 PM, Commander Kinsey wrote:

[snip]

I have a LED


That irritates me, why don't you write "an LED"? How do you say "LED"?
I say "Ell Eee Dee", not "Light Emitting Diode". So it needs an "an",
not an "a".


"an LED" irritates me. I know the word is "light".


But which would you say if you read the sentence out loud? Do you say the letters like me, or do you say the full words? I say "DVLA" not "Driver and Vehicle Licensing Authority"

bulb (60W equivalent) in a lamp here.


60W? Are you a Klingon and love darkness? I use 100W and 150W bulbs
only. And lots of them. My living room (7 metres by 4 metres) contains
13 90W bulbs.


It also matters if the light source is in the right place, like from
behind is good if you're reading or watching TV.


I prefer the whole room to be evenly lit.

Some people think more light is always better. I remember working behind
a TV (26-inch CRT console), where I could see OK. Then someone, trying
to be helpful, turned on a nearby wall lamp. The effect of that is that
the area behind the TV became completely BLACK.


More light is better if the whole room is lit evenly. Which is why I prefer strip lights to point sources. Much better if you're soldering for example, you don't create shadows, as light can come to the workpiece from all angles, no matter where your body/head/hands/tools are.