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#1
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Why do LEDs generate heat? I want a technical answer not "because they're inefficient". And will we ever make them more efficient?
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#2
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On Thu, 03 Oct 2019 14:29:30 +0100, Commander Kinsey wrote:
Why do LEDs generate heat? I want a technical answer not "because they're inefficient". And will we ever make them more efficient? I got useful answers from Quora: "LEDs are ever more and more efficient. In the last 40 years, tremendous strides have been made. They generate heat because they are conducting electricity through semiconductors. Unlike metals which have very little resistance to electric currents, semiconductors offer more resistance. Not as much as true nonmetals, but still more than metals. It is the resistance of the semiconductor layers, both N and P, and the resistance of the junction itself, that generate the heat." "Every electronic device is less than 100 percent efficient. On a low level, it is due to the law of probability, or as the physicists call it, entropy. The odds of all those electrons conveying their energy into photons is very low. Some are always making random transitions, generating heat instead of light." |
#4
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Commander Kinsey wrote
Why do LEDs generate heat? Because not all the electricity used is turned into light. I want a technical answer not "because they're inefficient". And will we ever make them more efficient? Very likely with the higher powered leds. |
#5
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On Fri, 4 Oct 2019 03:09:32 +1000, cantankerous trolling geezer Rodent
Speed, the auto-contradicting senile sociopath, blabbered, again: I want a technical answer not "because they're inefficient". And will we ever make them more efficient? Very likely with the higher powered leds. You two idiots had better wonder whether they will ever find a cure for psychopathy and sociopathy which you deranged idiots keep exhibiting here! -- Website (from 2007) dedicated to the 85-year-old trolling senile cretin from Oz: https://www.pcreview.co.uk/threads/r...d-faq.2973853/ |
#6
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On 03/10/2019 14:29, Commander Kinsey wrote:
Why do LEDs generate heat? I want a technical answer not "because they're inefficient". And will we ever make them more efficient? Besides the inefficiencies in the LED itself which other posters have covered, LED lamps have some current regulation or power supply built-in which will not be 100% efficient and thus generates heat. |
#7
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On Thu, 03 Oct 2019 19:29:42 +0100, Robert wrote:
On 03/10/2019 14:29, Commander Kinsey wrote: Why do LEDs generate heat? I want a technical answer not "because they're inefficient". And will we ever make them more efficient? Besides the inefficiencies in the LED itself which other posters have covered, LED lamps have some current regulation or power supply built-in which will not be 100% efficient and thus generates heat. True, but it's the LEDs themselves that are the warmest, and also the most susceptible to heat. |
#8
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"Commander Kinsey" wrote in message
news ![]() On Thu, 03 Oct 2019 19:29:42 +0100, Robert wrote: On 03/10/2019 14:29, Commander Kinsey wrote: Why do LEDs generate heat? I want a technical answer not "because they're inefficient". And will we ever make them more efficient? Besides the inefficiencies in the LED itself which other posters have covered, LED lamps have some current regulation or power supply built-in which will not be 100% efficient and thus generates heat. True, but it's the LEDs themselves that are the warmest, and also the most susceptible to heat. But if you feel a Philips Hue bulb which is the size of an old tungsten 100W bulb, the part that gives off light (presumably where the LEDs are) is cool. It is the neck, near the fitting, which gets hot - and I presume that's where the PSU is. Likewise for GU10 bulbs (Philips Hue or ordinary non-dimmable LED) the front and conical sides don't get hot, whereas the neck near the fitting gets hot. |
#9
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![]() "NY" wrote in message ... "Commander Kinsey" wrote in message news ![]() On Thu, 03 Oct 2019 19:29:42 +0100, Robert wrote: On 03/10/2019 14:29, Commander Kinsey wrote: Why do LEDs generate heat? I want a technical answer not "because they're inefficient". And will we ever make them more efficient? Besides the inefficiencies in the LED itself which other posters have covered, LED lamps have some current regulation or power supply built-in which will not be 100% efficient and thus generates heat. True, but it's the LEDs themselves that are the warmest, and also the most susceptible to heat. But if you feel a Philips Hue bulb which is the size of an old tungsten 100W bulb, the part that gives off light (presumably where the LEDs are) is cool. Mine isnt, its warmer than me. It is the neck, near the fitting, which gets hot - and I presume that's where the PSU is. Likewise for GU10 bulbs (Philips Hue or ordinary non-dimmable LED) the front and conical sides don't get hot, whereas the neck near the fitting gets hot. |
#10
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On Thu, 3 Oct 2019 19:29:42 +0100, Robert, another brain dead,
troll-feeding, seinile idiot, blathered: Besides the inefficiencies in the LED itself which other posters have covered, LED lamps have some current regulation or power supply built-in which will not be 100% efficient and thus generates heat. Yet another senile idiot who doesn't get what's going on here! BG |
#11
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On Thu, 3 Oct 2019 19:50:02 +0100, NY, the notorious, troll-feeding senile
idiot, blathered again: But if you feel a Philips Hue bulb which is the size of an old tungsten 100W bulb, the part that gives off light (presumably where the LEDs are) is cool. It is the neck, near the fitting, which gets hot - and I presume that's where the PSU is. Likewise for GU10 bulbs (Philips Hue or ordinary non-dimmable LED) the front and conical sides don't get hot, whereas the neck near the fitting gets hot. So, for how long will you idiots still go on like that again? Until the sociopathic attention whore is fed up with you again? Will you troll-feeding senile idiots NEVER learn? |
#12
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On Fri, 4 Oct 2019 05:12:47 +1000, cantankerous trolling geezer Rodent
Speed, the auto-contradicting senile sociopath, blabbered, again: But if you feel a Philips Hue bulb which is the size of an old tungsten 100W bulb, the part that gives off light (presumably where the LEDs are) is cool. Mine isnt, its warmer than me. LOL! Auto-contradicting senile idiot! Let's all hope that you'll SOON reach room temperature! -- Sqwertz to Rot Speed: "This is just a hunch, but I'm betting you're kinda an argumentative asshole. MID: |
#13
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On Thu, 03 Oct 2019 19:50:02 +0100, NY wrote:
"Commander Kinsey" wrote in message news ![]() On Thu, 03 Oct 2019 19:29:42 +0100, Robert wrote: On 03/10/2019 14:29, Commander Kinsey wrote: Why do LEDs generate heat? I want a technical answer not "because they're inefficient". And will we ever make them more efficient? Besides the inefficiencies in the LED itself which other posters have covered, LED lamps have some current regulation or power supply built-in which will not be 100% efficient and thus generates heat. True, but it's the LEDs themselves that are the warmest, and also the most susceptible to heat. But if you feel a Philips Hue bulb which is the size of an old tungsten 100W bulb, the part that gives off light (presumably where the LEDs are) is cool. It is the neck, near the fitting, which gets hot - and I presume that's where the PSU is. Or where the heatsink from the LEDs is. Likewise for GU10 bulbs (Philips Hue or ordinary non-dimmable LED) the front and conical sides don't get hot, whereas the neck near the fitting gets hot. |
#14
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On Thu, 03 Oct 2019 22:21:00 +0100, Colonel Edmund J. Burke wrote:
On 10/3/2019 6:49 AM, Commander Kinsey wrote: On Thu, 03 Oct 2019 14:29:30 +0100, Commander Kinsey wrote: Why do LEDs generate heat? I want a technical answer not "because they're inefficient". And will we ever make them more efficient? I got useful answers from Quora: "LEDs are ever more and more efficient. In the last 40 years, tremendous strides have been made. They generate heat because they are conducting electricity through semiconductors. Unlike metals which have very little resistance to electric currents, semiconductors offer more resistance. Not as much as true nonmetals, but still more than metals. It is the resistance of the semiconductor layers, both N and P, and the resistance of the junction itself, that generate the heat." "Every electronic device is less than 100 percent efficient. On a low level, it is due to the law of probability, or as the physicists call it, entropy. The odds of all those electrons conveying their energy into photons is very low. Some are always making random transitions, generating heat instead of light." I wish you'd make a "random transition" the **** outa here, limey asshole! Learn to use a killfile. |
#15
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On 10/3/19 1:29 PM, Robert wrote:
On 03/10/2019 14:29, Commander Kinsey wrote: Why do LEDs generate heat? I want a technical answer not "because they're inefficient". And will we ever make them more efficient? Besides the inefficiencies in the LED itself which other posters have covered, LED lamps have some current regulation or power supply built-in which will not be 100% efficient and thus generates heat. I have a LED bulb (60W equivalent) in a lamp here. The bulb itself doesn't get hot like an incandescent bulb does. What gets hot is an area around the base. -- 82 days until the winter celebration (Wed, Dec 25, 2019 12:00:00 AM for 1 day). Mark Lloyd http://notstupid.us/ "You didn't hear it You didn't see it..." ...how absurd it all seems without any proof" -- from "Tommy" by 'The Who' |
#16
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On Fri, 04 Oct 2019 20:32:33 +0100, Mark Lloyd wrote:
On 10/3/19 1:29 PM, Robert wrote: On 03/10/2019 14:29, Commander Kinsey wrote: Why do LEDs generate heat? I want a technical answer not "because they're inefficient". And will we ever make them more efficient? Besides the inefficiencies in the LED itself which other posters have covered, LED lamps have some current regulation or power supply built-in which will not be 100% efficient and thus generates heat. 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". 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. The bulb itself doesn't get hot like an incandescent bulb does. What gets hot is an area around the base. Through the heatsink probably, most of the heat is generated by the LEDs, not the far more efficient power supply. |
#17
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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". 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. 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. [snip] -- 81 days until the winter celebration (Wed, Dec 25, 2019 12:00:00 AM for 1 day). Mark Lloyd http://notstupid.us/ "Tinnitus is a pain in the neck" |
#18
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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. |
#19
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On Sat, 5 Oct 2019 13:46:08 -0500, Mark Lloyd, another absolutely brain
dead, troll-feeding, senile cretin, drivelled: "an LED" irritates me. I know the word is "light". You must about as big an idiot as the retarded troll you keep feeding, senile cretin! LOL |
#20
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"Mark Lloyd" wrote in message
... On 10/4/19 2:51 PM, Commander Kinsey wrote: 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". I think it is normal convention that an initialism that starts with a *vowel sound* takes "an", on the grounds of euphony: that in normal English, you never precede a word that starts with a vowel sound with "a". Hence an apple, but a uniform. A hedge or a hotel or a historic event but an honourable occasion (H is sounded for the first three but silent for the last one). For some reason, it considered "better" to use "an" before hotel and historic, even though the H is sounded. That sounds as daft to my ears as "an spoon" - it's not a vowel sound so you use "a". I could understand if people pronounce hotel the French way, but it needs to be consistent: "an 'otel" or "a hotel". As regards initialisms/abbreviations, you do get anomalies like "an LED" (ell-ee-dee) that starts with a consonant but "a UFO" (you-eff-oh) that starts with a vowel pronounced as a consonant. |
#21
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"Commander Kinsey" wrote in message
news ![]() On Sat, 05 Oct 2019 19:46:08 +0100, Mark Lloyd wrote: On 10/4/19 2:51 PM, Commander Kinsey wrote: 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. Exactly. It is the use that you are making of the light which governs whether you want a point source and directional lighting, or a diffuse light. I prefer to read with a light over my shoulder to light the pages of the book, but with the rest of the room dark enough than I'm not distracted by everything else around the book. Likewise for watching TV - screen brighter than ambient light, even if the ambient light isn't reducing screen contrast by brightening the dark parts of it. My wife prefers uniform lighting - even if that means you are looking into the light. When reading in bed, she will turn on the overhead light (single ceiling rose or lots of GU10 spotlights) which illuminate the rest of the room and shine right in your face, but leave the pages of the book in shadow, She believes that reading by over-the-shoulder light, with the book brighter than the background, strains your eyes. |
#22
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On Sat, 5 Oct 2019 20:33:14 +0100, NY, the notorious, troll-feeding,
endlessly blathering senile idiot, blathered again: My wife prefers uniform lighting You got a "wife", troll-feeding senile idiot? Does she know about you sucking troll cock on Usenet on every occasion? BG |
#23
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On Sat, 05 Oct 2019 20:23:02 +0100, NY wrote:
"Mark Lloyd" wrote in message ... On 10/4/19 2:51 PM, Commander Kinsey wrote: 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". I think it is normal convention that an initialism that starts with a *vowel sound* takes "an", on the grounds of euphony: that in normal English, you never precede a word that starts with a vowel sound with "a". Hence an apple, but a uniform. A hedge or a hotel or a historic event but an honourable occasion (H is sounded for the first three but silent for the last one). For some reason, it considered "better" to use "an" before hotel and historic, even though the H is sounded. That sounds as daft to my ears as "an spoon" - it's not a vowel sound so you use "a". I could understand if people pronounce hotel the French way, but it needs to be consistent: "an 'otel" or "a hotel". My god! I agree with you completely. I was about to say the same thing as soon as you wrote "a historic event", it's really grating to my ears to hear an historic. Also, Americans get the Hs wrong. Like erb, as in marijuana. An 'erb would be fine, but they think the H is always silent. As regards initialisms/abbreviations, you do get anomalies like "an LED" (ell-ee-dee) that starts with a consonant but "a UFO" (you-eff-oh) that starts with a vowel pronounced as a consonant. I say "a URL" for a web address, but I knew someone who said "an url", as in how you would pronounce "hurl" with a silent H. He insisted that acronyms should be pronounced like words. WLED became "well-ed", as in "well" followed by the name "Ed". I assume because pronouncing a W before an L was too difficult, so he then added extra vowels. |
#24
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On Sat, 05 Oct 2019 20:33:14 +0100, NY wrote:
"Commander Kinsey" wrote in message news ![]() On Sat, 05 Oct 2019 19:46:08 +0100, Mark Lloyd wrote: On 10/4/19 2:51 PM, Commander Kinsey wrote: 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. Exactly. It is the use that you are making of the light which governs whether you want a point source and directional lighting, or a diffuse light. I prefer to read with a light over my shoulder to light the pages of the book, but with the rest of the room dark enough than I'm not distracted by everything else around the book. Likewise for watching TV - screen brighter than ambient light, even if the ambient light isn't reducing screen contrast by brightening the dark parts of it. I always like everything lit in the room, or I doze off. My wife prefers uniform lighting - even if that means you are looking into the light. When reading in bed, she will turn on the overhead light (single ceiling rose or lots of GU10 spotlights) which illuminate the rest of the room and shine right in your face, but leave the pages of the book in shadow, She believes that reading by over-the-shoulder light, with the book brighter than the background, strains your eyes. That may be true, and why I feel sleepy if I do so. But then some people read to get to sleep. |
#25
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On 2019-10-05 12:48 p.m., Commander Kinsey wrote:
On Sat, 05 Oct 2019 20:33:14 +0100, NY wrote: "Commander Kinsey" wrote in message news ![]() On Sat, 05 Oct 2019 19:46:08 +0100, Mark Lloyd wrote: On 10/4/19 2:51 PM, Commander Kinsey wrote: 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. Exactly. It is the use that you are making of the light which governs whether you want a point source and directional lighting, or a diffuse light. I prefer to read with a light over my shoulder to light the pages of the book, but with the rest of the room dark enough than I'm not distracted by everything else around the book. Likewise for watching TV - screen brighter than ambient light, even if the ambient light isn't reducing screen contrast by brightening the dark parts of it. I always like everything lit in the room, or I doze off. My wife prefers uniform lighting - even if that means you are looking into the light. When reading in bed, she will turn on the overhead light (single ceiling rose or lots of GU10 spotlights) which illuminate the rest of the room and shine right in your face, but leave the pages of the book in shadow, She believes that reading by over-the-shoulder light, with the book brighter than the background, strains your eyes. That may be true, and why I feel sleepy if I do so.* But then some people read to get to sleep. i have sex to fall asleep and i don't care what the lights are doing |
#26
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On 05/10/2019 19:46, 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". It's "a LED" if you pronounce it as an acronym. -- Max Demian |
#27
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On Sat, 05 Oct 2019 23:08:43 +0100, Max Demian wrote:
On 05/10/2019 19:46, 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". It's "a LED" if you pronounce it as an acronym. What do you mean by "pronounce it as an acronym"? I would have said that means "ell eee dee" as in you're treating it as an acronym rather than a word and spelling it out. |
#28
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On 06/10/2019 00:14, Commander Kinsey wrote:
On Sat, 05 Oct 2019 23:08:43 +0100, Max Demian wrote: On 05/10/2019 19:46, 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". It's "a LED" if you pronounce it as an acronym. What do you mean by "pronounce it as an acronym"?* I would have said that means "ell eee dee" as in you're treating it as an acronym rather than a word and spelling it out. An acronym is a pronounceable abbreviation, e.g. NATO, scuba, radar. -- Max Demian |
#29
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On Sun, 6 Oct 2019 10:07:15 +0100, Max Dumb, another mentally deficient
inveterate troll-feeding senile idiot, blathered again: What do you mean by "pronounce it as an acronym"?* I would have said that means "ell eee dee" as in you're treating it as an acronym rather than a word and spelling it out. An acronym is a pronounceable abbreviation, e.g. NATO, scuba, radar. LOL Oh, no, another bull**** "conversation" ensuing! |
#30
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On 10/5/19 1:59 PM, Commander Kinsey wrote:
[snip] 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. In the case I described, the lamp (a "helpful" person tuned on) was to my side, almost the same direction as the back of the TV. -- 80 days until the winter celebration (Wed, Dec 25, 2019 12:00:00 AM for 1 day). Mark Lloyd http://notstupid.us/ If a member of McDonalds' staff was God: "OK, one Universe. Uh, you want fries with that?" |
#31
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On 10/5/19 2:33 PM, NY wrote:
[snip] My wife prefers uniform lighting - even if that means you are looking into the light. When reading in bed, she will turn on the overhead light (single ceiling rose or lots of GU10 spotlights) which illuminate the rest of the room and shine right in your face, but leave the pages of the book in shadow, She believes that reading by over-the-shoulder light, with the book brighter than the background, strains your eyes. Over-the-shoulder light would be a lot better than black letters on a very dark gray background (because your eyes are adapted to the bright light coming around the edges of the book). -- 80 days until the winter celebration (Wed, Dec 25, 2019 12:00:00 AM for 1 day). Mark Lloyd http://notstupid.us/ If a member of McDonalds' staff was God: "OK, one Universe. Uh, you want fries with that?" |
#32
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On Sun, 6 Oct 2019 12:57:57 -0500, Mark Lloyd, another absolutely brain
dead, troll-feeding, senile cretin, drivelled: Over-the-shoulder light would be a lot better than black letters on a very dark gray background It would still be a LOT better if you just shut your stupid senile gob, you notorious, troll-feeding senile asshole! |
#33
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On Sun, 6 Oct 2019 12:54:27 -0500, Mark Lloyd, another absolutely brain
dead, troll-feeding, senile cretin, drivelled: In the case I described, the lamp (a "helpful" person tuned on) was to my side, almost the same direction as the back of the TV. It's rather obvious now, a troll-feeding senile idiot is as much of a driveling mentally deficient idiot as the troll he keeps feeding! |
#34
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On Sun, 06 Oct 2019 10:07:15 +0100, Max Demian wrote:
On 06/10/2019 00:14, Commander Kinsey wrote: On Sat, 05 Oct 2019 23:08:43 +0100, Max Demian wrote: On 05/10/2019 19:46, 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". It's "a LED" if you pronounce it as an acronym. What do you mean by "pronounce it as an acronym"? I would have said that means "ell eee dee" as in you're treating it as an acronym rather than a word and spelling it out. An acronym is a pronounceable abbreviation, e.g. NATO, scuba, radar. Ah, I always say acronym to mean abbreviation. I don't care if it's technically wrong :-) |
#35
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Commander Kinsey wrote:
On Sun, 06 Oct 2019 10:07:15 +0100, Max Demian wrote: On 06/10/2019 00:14, Commander Kinsey wrote: On Sat, 05 Oct 2019 23:08:43 +0100, Max Demian wrote: On 05/10/2019 19:46, 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". It's "a LED" if you pronounce it as an acronym. What do you mean by "pronounce it as an acronym"? I would have said that means "ell eee dee" as in you're treating it as an acronym rather than a word and spelling it out. An acronym is a pronounceable abbreviation, e.g. NATO, scuba, radar. Ah, I always say acronym to mean abbreviation. I don't care if it's technically wrong :-) Top notch troll phucker. Well done. Now why you just **** off and die? |
#36
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On Mon, 07 Oct 2019 19:33:19 +0100, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote:
Commander Kinsey wrote: On Sun, 06 Oct 2019 10:07:15 +0100, Max Demian wrote: On 06/10/2019 00:14, Commander Kinsey wrote: On Sat, 05 Oct 2019 23:08:43 +0100, Max Demian wrote: On 05/10/2019 19:46, 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". It's "a LED" if you pronounce it as an acronym. What do you mean by "pronounce it as an acronym"? I would have said that means "ell eee dee" as in you're treating it as an acronym rather than a word and spelling it out. An acronym is a pronounceable abbreviation, e.g. NATO, scuba, radar. Ah, I always say acronym to mean abbreviation. I don't care if it's technically wrong :-) Top notch troll phucker. Well done. Now why you just **** off and die? Don't bother trying to answer things that go over your head. |
#37
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On Sun, 06 Oct 2019 18:54:27 +0100, Mark Lloyd wrote:
On 10/5/19 1:59 PM, Commander Kinsey wrote: [snip] 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. In the case I described, the lamp (a "helpful" person tuned on) was to my side, almost the same direction as the back of the TV. The lighting in all my rooms comes from striplights all over the ceiling, so everything is lit nice and evenly. |
#38
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On 2019-10-07 3:18 p.m., Commander Kinsey wrote:
On Sun, 06 Oct 2019 18:54:27 +0100, Mark Lloyd wrote: On 10/5/19 1:59 PM, Commander Kinsey wrote: [snip] 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. In the case I described, the lamp (a "helpful" person tuned on) was to my side, almost the same direction as the back of the TV. The lighting in all my rooms comes from striplights all over the ceiling, so everything is lit nice and evenly. no it isn't and your light is a bare bulb in a night light |
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