Light bulb or switch that fades out?
I like the way the interior lights in newer cars fade to off. Out of
curiosity, are those fading bulbs, or are do cars have a wired-in piece of electronics that controls the light. I'd like to emulate that effect with certain lights inside the house. I've been googling around, probably using poor terms like fading light bulbs and light switch fade. Are there products I can buy that will do this, other than regular dimmers? thanks, Keith |
Light bulb or switch that fades out?
It is a feature in quality touch light dimmers. When you touch them the
light ramps up to the brightness you have set, touch them again and they ramp down to off. Check Leviton, Lutron and other quality manufacturers for their higher end dimmers. You may not find them at a BORG but they are available from electrical supply houses. "k" wrote in message . net... I like the way the interior lights in newer cars fade to off. Out of curiosity, are those fading bulbs, or are do cars have a wired-in piece of electronics that controls the light. I'd like to emulate that effect with certain lights inside the house. I've been googling around, probably using poor terms like fading light bulbs and light switch fade. Are there products I can buy that will do this, other than regular dimmers? thanks, Keith |
Light bulb or switch that fades out?
Check out Lutron Maestro
"k" wrote in message . net... I like the way the interior lights in newer cars fade to off. Out of curiosity, are those fading bulbs, or are do cars have a wired-in piece of electronics that controls the light. I'd like to emulate that effect with certain lights inside the house. I've been googling around, probably using poor terms like fading light bulbs and light switch fade. Are there products I can buy that will do this, other than regular dimmers? thanks, Keith |
Light bulb or switch that fades out?
On Apr 29, 12:02 am, "RBM" rbm2(remove wrote:
Check out Lutron Maestro "k" wrote in message . net... I like the way the interior lights in newer cars fade to off. Out of curiosity, are those fading bulbs, or are do cars have a wired-in piece of electronics that controls the light. I'd like to emulate that effect with certain lights inside the house. I've been googling around, probably using poor terms like fading light bulbs and light switch fade. Are there products I can buy that will do this, other than regular dimmers? thanks, Keith- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Another more complicated, unnecessary and possibility of failure gadget added to modern vehicles! If mine ever fails (although not likely cos it's Nissan) I will promptly rewire to a straight switch. Even now in my 70s find it takes little effort to switch something on or off! Recalling one of my first technical instructors who dismissed unnecessary gadgets with "Too bloody clever by half.' And experience has shown him to be right. Your choice and mileage may differ however. |
Light bulb or switch that fades out?
On Sat, 28 Apr 2007 20:47:44 +0000, k wrote:
I like the way the interior lights in newer cars fade to off. Out of curiosity, are those fading bulbs, or are do cars have a wired-in piece of electronics that controls the light. I'd like to emulate that effect with certain lights inside the house. I've been googling around, probably using poor terms like fading light bulbs and light switch fade. Are there products I can buy that will do this, other than regular dimmers? thanks, Keith Electronics. Its called 'theater dimming' typically. |
Light bulb or switch that fades out?
On Sun, 29 Apr 2007 03:54:24 -0700, terry wrote:
On Apr 29, 12:02 am, "RBM" rbm2(remove wrote: Check out Lutron Maestro "k" wrote in message . net... I like the way the interior lights in newer cars fade to off. Out of curiosity, are those fading bulbs, or are do cars have a wired-in piece of electronics that controls the light. I'd like to emulate that effect with certain lights inside the house. I've been googling around, probably using poor terms like fading light bulbs and light switch fade. Are there products I can buy that will do this, other than regular dimmers? thanks, Keith- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Another more complicated, unnecessary and possibility of failure gadget added to modern vehicles! Not quite. Its a nifty feature. And since the bulbs are already powered by a FET or other electronic driver, it saves on fusing and wire gauge and can extend bulb life due ot soft starting. Not to mention that moving parts wear out. Electronic drivers rarely ever do. |
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