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UK diy (uk.d-i-y) For the discussion of all topics related to diy (do-it-yourself) in the UK. All levels of experience and proficency are welcome to join in to ask questions or offer solutions. |
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#41
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On Wed, 9 Jun 2021 11:50:53 +0100, Chris Green wrote:
T i m wrote: On Wed, 9 Jun 2021 10:40:48 +0100, ss wrote: On 09/06/2021 10:08, Brian Gaff (Sofa) wrote: Yes not new news, just the timescale is now known, how is it then that I can still buy tungsten bulbs in the high street? I get the distinct impression that like lots of things, the law is just ignored when it suits people. Brian Many tungsten were sold on ebay as `heaters`the wording got them around the restrictions. Which is probably a more accurate description of them, given most of the energy going into them is converted into heat! Same applies to LEDs, even the best are still only in the 30% to 40% sort of area if you include the losses in the associated drivers etc. Yeahbut, turn a 60W incandescent lamp on for 10 seconds and then try and touch it. Have a 60W (light equiv) LED lamp on for 10 minutes and it will still only feel warm? Suggesting, that (light) like for like, LED's are generally much more efficient as they generally run much cooler? (I've got a 15W (equiv) desk lamp on here set up to the Home Automation to come on when the light level drops below a certain threshold and it's been on for a couple of hours now. Whilst it's 'warm' I can still easily unscrew it and take it out, not something I'd try with even a 15W incandescent that had been on for a fraction of that time). ;-( Ulitimately of course *all* the energy ends up as heat. What, even the stuff coming out as visible light / UV light? Cheers, T i m |
#42
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On 09/06/2021 14:25, NY wrote:
In the kitchen and in my study, we use MiniSun GU10s which are about 6000K - just slightly cooler than LED bulbs which are sold as "daylight". I tried some 6,500K panels in the kitchen and I had to send them back. They were soooo cold! Bill |
#43
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On Wednesday, 9 June 2021 at 17:14:45 UTC+1, Owain Lastname wrote:
On Wednesday, 9 June 2021 at 15:19:56 UTC+1, Mark Carver wrote: There is also the theatre where halogen lamps are still in use in significant quantities. Operating theatres too? And vehicle headlights :-) Illegal for LED headlights at present, I believe. Owain Do you mean to claim that LED headlights are at present illegal? Shame no-one told VAG a few years ago when they made my car. |
#44
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On Wed, 09 Jun 2021 17:14:34 +0100, Scott
wrote: On Wed, 09 Jun 2021 16:22:46 +0100, Scott wrote: On Wed, 09 Jun 2021 16:11:48 +0100, T i m wrote: On Wed, 09 Jun 2021 15:57:24 +0100, Scott wrote: snip Even better, you can get direct substitutes. I bought two four foot long LED tubes for the utility room, which fitted the existing ballast after replacing the starter with a dummy. I've *just* picked up a high output 5' LED florry replacement for a fitting in the study / workshop but the fitting is electronic so I'm going to have to bypass all the 'guts'. Did it not come with a replacement 'starter', which just shorts out the starter unit or does this only work with non-electronic ballasts (as mine was)? The main reason for doing it isn't (primarily) the light but the hope it will get rid of the mains hum ... ;-( It achieved that. PS Now I remember. I think it comes as two versions: one for electronic ballasts and one for non-electronic. Mine was the latter (which I think is easier). Yeah, the two I did for the kitchen were 'old skool' and I removed the ballast and cap completely on one and just wired it though the non-starter (because mine had 250mA fuses in them) and the other still has the ballast and cap in circuit (for now). Remembering this particular unit was HF got me thinking that I should have replaced the entire fitting for an LED one, however I think I'm better off saying with the 'tube' design as then I can swap out the tubes if they fail or if I want to change the usage (less bright, warmer etc) without replacing the entire unit. I'm probably also going to include that lamp into the HA with an occupancy sensor as I'm generally only turning it on when working in there or setting up the 3D printer. I'm getting too used to the hall, kitchen and landing lights going on and off automatically (movement / occupancy) it seems quite 'primitive to have to still turn some on and off yourself. ;-) Cheers, T i m |
#45
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Owain Lastname wrote:
And vehicle headlights :-) Illegal for LED headlights at present, I believe. Mine has (factory) LEDs, newer models have laser headlights, but I think that's just using a blue laser diode to illuminate a phosphor to produce the white light ... not able to blind cyclists :-P |
#46
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On Wed, 09 Jun 2021 16:35:31 +0100, "Dave Plowman (News)"
wrote: In article , T i m wrote: On Wed, 09 Jun 2021 15:57:24 +0100, Scott wrote: snip Even better, you can get direct substitutes. I bought two four foot long LED tubes for the utility room, which fitted the existing ballast after replacing the starter with a dummy. I've *just* picked up a high output 5' LED florry replacement for a fitting in the study / workshop but the fitting is electronic so I'm going to have to bypass all the 'guts'. The main reason for doing it isn't (primarily) the light but the hope it will get rid of the mains hum ... ;-( Mains hum from an electronic ballast? Something not right there as they (should) run at a higher frequency to get rid of flicker. Agreed, however, the 'hum' clearly goes on and off with the light so if it's not from the fitting it's from the tube itself? Unfortunately I can't easily test the LED tube in there because it's an HF fitting. ;-( But then I did have similar with one of the 6' fittings in the kitchen that was the LED tube (I just thought I hadn't noticed it with the florry). Took all the guts out completely, that fitting with the second hand LED tube in it still hummed like a goodun? ;-( Two new LED tubes from TLC seemed to cure it. ;-) (I may be hypersensitive to 50hz because of my tinnitus). Cheers, T i m |
#47
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On 09/06/2021 12:20, nightjar wrote:
On 09/06/2021 09:39, ss wrote: ..."Sales of halogen lightbulbs are to be banned in the UK from September, with fluorescent lights to follow, under government climate change plans".... Apart from a few, rarely used, lamps that have yet to be changed, I have long converted everything to LED. +1, although I have several of the little desk lamps with "radio aeriel" power feeds that use G4s. However I can report that I've just put a LED replacement in one that has just failed and although it is perhaps not quite so bright, the output is acceptable. |
#48
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On Wed, 9 Jun 2021 09:33:49 -0700 (PDT), polygonum_on_google
wrote: On Wednesday, 9 June 2021 at 17:14:45 UTC+1, Owain Lastname wrote: On Wednesday, 9 June 2021 at 15:19:56 UTC+1, Mark Carver wrote: There is also the theatre where halogen lamps are still in use in significant quantities. Operating theatres too? And vehicle headlights :-) Illegal for LED headlights at present, I believe. Owain Do you mean to claim that LED headlights are at present illegal? Shame no-one told VAG a few years ago when they made my car. Volkswagen is a criminal company :-) |
#49
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On Wed, 09 Jun 2021 16:36:34 +0100, "Dave Plowman (News)"
wrote: In article , T i m wrote: So Bill was 'wright' again. ;-) Perfectly possible to get some of the Astra 28 group but not all, if the dish is off alignment. I think *all* bets would be off if the dish was out of alignment. ;-) It's also not knowing what you can get away with. Quite, something I learned very quickly whilst installing 10 satellite systems. The first one took 'some time' to understand / get right then after that I couldn't see why it took so long the first time. ;-) On the dish bracket, each degree marking is about 1mm apart. And the setting I got was 22.7. With the pointer being about 2mm wide. Yeah, great. ;-( I sort of assumed with a 1 metre dish it would be pretty tolerant. Find any one of the Astra group and the others would be OK. But not so - obviously. With a single LNB you only get a few degrees of latitude and I think they are ~6 degrees apart ... so you could easily be 'off tune' for some of the group if you were focused on one of the outliers (and worse if you were on the edge of the window in the wrong direction on one of the outliers). Like using a torch with a very tight beam to try to light up your whole back garden from the back door. Multi Satellite is a fun step up from single Sat and both over terrestrial DTV and that is the same from ATV. ;-) The shame is (often old) people paying to have their new DTV 'set up' when in many cases you just plug it in and follow the onscreen prompts and it does it all for you (unlike the old ATV where you had to manually tune each button and the video etc). ;-) Cheers, T i m |
#50
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On 09/06/2021 17:33, polygonum_on_google wrote:
On Wednesday, 9 June 2021 at 17:14:45 UTC+1, Owain Lastname wrote: On Wednesday, 9 June 2021 at 15:19:56 UTC+1, Mark Carver wrote: There is also the theatre where halogen lamps are still in use in significant quantities. Operating theatres too? And vehicle headlights :-) Illegal for LED headlights at present, I believe. Owain Do you mean to claim that LED headlights are at present illegal? Shame no-one told VAG a few years ago when they made my car. Effectively, they are. However, supplied as part of a homologated car, they have to be accepted under EU rules (and we are still sticking with those) and the DOT has gone so far as to say that it would be unreasonable to not permit retrofitting to cars that came without them - however, there are requirements that make retrofitting possibly expensive and difficult (wash/wipe and self-levelling). |
#51
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In article ,
polygonum_on_google wrote: On Wednesday, 9 June 2021 at 17:14:45 UTC+1, Owain Lastname wrote: On Wednesday, 9 June 2021 at 15:19:56 UTC+1, Mark Carver wrote: There is also the theatre where halogen lamps are still in use in significant quantities. Operating theatres too? And vehicle headlights :-) Illegal for LED headlights at present, I believe. Owain Do you mean to claim that LED headlights are at present illegal? Shame no-one told VAG a few years ago when they made my car. Just another reg thought up by either civil servants with zero technical knowledge or pressure groups with self interests. In theory fitting replacement headlamp bulbs is now an MOT fail. Although not sure how the tester is going to know they are fitted, since he's not allowed to dismantle anything. Poor beam control causing dazzle is already covered in an MOT - although I often wonder how some factory fits pass this. -- *If at first you do succeed, try not to look too astonished. Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
#52
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On 09/06/2021 12:55, Scott wrote:
On Wed, 9 Jun 2021 12:20:16 +0100, nightjar wrote: On 09/06/2021 09:39, ss wrote: ..."Sales of halogen lightbulbs are to be banned in the UK from September, with fluorescent lights to follow, under government climate change plans".... Apart from a few, rarely used, lamps that have yet to be changed, I have long converted everything to LED. Me too, except for my bedside lamp which is halogen for colour rendition. Any comments on reading under a 230V LED spotlight? Would you go for cool, daylight or warm? This may or may not help. https://www.lamps-on-line.com/colour-temperature Halogen is regarded as 3000k, or warm white. If you want to stay awake, the the cooler temperatures, to go to sleep then perhaps aim for the warmer temps. |
#53
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On 09/06/2021 17:45, T i m wrote:
On Wed, 09 Jun 2021 16:35:31 +0100, "Dave Plowman (News)" wrote: In article , T i m wrote: On Wed, 09 Jun 2021 15:57:24 +0100, Scott wrote: snip Even better, you can get direct substitutes. I bought two four foot long LED tubes for the utility room, which fitted the existing ballast after replacing the starter with a dummy. I've *just* picked up a high output 5' LED florry replacement for a fitting in the study / workshop but the fitting is electronic so I'm going to have to bypass all the 'guts'. The main reason for doing it isn't (primarily) the light but the hope it will get rid of the mains hum ... ;-( Mains hum from an electronic ballast? Something not right there as they (should) run at a higher frequency to get rid of flicker. Agreed, however, the 'hum' clearly goes on and off with the light so if it's not from the fitting it's from the tube itself? Unfortunately I can't easily test the LED tube in there because it's an HF fitting. ;-( But then I did have similar with one of the 6' fittings in the kitchen that was the LED tube (I just thought I hadn't noticed it with the florry). Took all the guts out completely, that fitting with the second hand LED tube in it still hummed like a goodun? ;-( Two new LED tubes from TLC seemed to cure it. ;-) (I may be hypersensitive to 50hz because of my tinnitus). Most LED tube replacements specifically say they should not be fitted without the HF ballast first being removed. |
#54
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On 09/06/2021 17:23, williamwright wrote:
On 09/06/2021 13:15, Andrew wrote: And fluorescent tubes are reasonably efficient in terms of light output vs power in. They are the same as LEDS Generally they're twice as efficient as fluorescent tubes. As this link demonstrates: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luminous_efficacy The ballast also generally consumes a few watts. |
#55
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In message , Robin
writes On 09/06/2021 14:06, Tim Lamb wrote: In message , nightjar writes On 09/06/2021 09:39, ss wrote: ..."Sales of halogen lightbulbs are to be banned in the UK from September, with fluorescent lights to follow, under government climate change plans".... Apart from a few, rarely used, lamps that have yet to be changed, I have long converted everything to LED. Hmm.. I have about 25 twin 5' florries in my workshop in 4 switched banks. This may be the moment to do the LED conversion. You have plenty of time to find 50 round tuits given they'll be phased out "from Sept 2023 onwards" Huh! Put up with an access tower on bare floor. Place is half full of fixed machinery now. Might be doable with an agile bloke from Doncaster:-) -- Tim Lamb |
#56
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The Other John wrote:
In our bathroom we have 2 halogen wall lights with G9 40W mains capsules rated at 460L each. Looking at LED replacements I can only see 200L capsules, so we would get less than half the illumination. Fortunately I have 5 spares so they should out last me! I have 6 x 12 V MR16 bulbs in my bathroom, fed via a Dimpull. So far they haven't made a version of the Dimpull that can handle LEDs. In the 16 years since they were installed (tempting providence) I don't think I have changed any bulbs, of which I have a stock, but I am on my 3rd Dimpull. Its soft start is obviously good for bulb life, just a shame its own design isn't better. Extrapolating, I don't think I need to worry. Chris -- Chris J Dixon Nottingham UK @ChrisJDixon1 Plant amazing Acers. |
#57
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In message
polygonum_on_google wrote: On Wednesday, 9 June 2021 at 17:14:45 UTC+1, Owain Lastname wrote: On Wednesday, 9 June 2021 at 15:19:56 UTC+1, Mark Carver wrote: There is also the theatre where halogen lamps are still in use in significant quantities. Operating theatres too? And vehicle headlights :-) Illegal for LED headlights at present, I believe. Owain Do you mean to claim that LED headlights are at present illegal? Shame no-one told VAG a few years ago when they made my car. No it is illegal to convert the factory fitted halogen headlights to LED -- John Bryan |
#58
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On 09/06/2021 18:34, Fredxx wrote:
On 09/06/2021 12:55, Scott wrote: On Wed, 9 Jun 2021 12:20:16 +0100, nightjar wrote: On 09/06/2021 09:39, ss wrote: ..."Sales of halogen lightbulbs are to be banned in the UK from September, with fluorescent lights to follow, under government climate change plans".... Apart from a few, rarely used, lamps that have yet to be changed, I have long converted everything to LED. Me too, except for my bedside lamp which is halogen for colour rendition.* Any comments on reading under a 230V LED spotlight?* Would you go for cool, daylight or warm? This may or may not help. * https://www.lamps-on-line.com/colour-temperature Halogen is regarded as 3000k, or warm white. If you want to stay awake, the the cooler temperatures, to go to sleep then perhaps aim for the warmer temps. Yes. But 2700K is the old incandescent colour. -- Adam |
#59
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T i m wrote:
Ulitimately of course *all* the energy ends up as heat. What, even the stuff coming out as visible light / UV light? Yes, of course, what else do you think happens to the energy? Some of the light may go out of your windows and the resultant heat is lost from your house but the light will be absorbed by the atmosphere and disappated as heat there. Ultimately a few photons worth of energy possibly escape into outer space I suppose. -- Chris Green · |
#60
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Owain Lastname wrote:
On Wednesday, 9 June 2021 at 15:19:56 UTC+1, Mark Carver wrote: There is also the theatre where halogen lamps are still in use in significant quantities. Operating theatres too? And vehicle headlights :-) Illegal for LED headlights at present, I believe. My motorbike has an LED headlight. I think it's *converting* to LED that's not allowed. -- Chris Green · |
#61
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On 09/06/2021 17:28, T i m wrote:
On Wed, 9 Jun 2021 11:50:53 +0100, Chris Green wrote: T i m wrote: On Wed, 9 Jun 2021 10:40:48 +0100, ss wrote: On 09/06/2021 10:08, Brian Gaff (Sofa) wrote: Yes not new news, just the timescale is now known, how is it then that I can still buy tungsten bulbs in the high street? I get the distinct impression that like lots of things, the law is just ignored when it suits people. Brian Many tungsten were sold on ebay as `heaters`the wording got them around the restrictions. Which is probably a more accurate description of them, given most of the energy going into them is converted into heat! Same applies to LEDs, even the best are still only in the 30% to 40% sort of area if you include the losses in the associated drivers etc. Yeahbut, turn a 60W incandescent lamp on for 10 seconds and then try and touch it. Have a 60W (light equiv) LED lamp on for 10 minutes and it will still only feel warm? Suggesting, that (light) like for like, LED's are generally much more efficient as they generally run much cooler? (I've got a 15W (equiv) desk lamp on here set up to the Home Automation to come on when the light level drops below a certain threshold and it's been on for a couple of hours now. Whilst it's 'warm' I can still easily unscrew it and take it out, not something I'd try with even a 15W incandescent that had been on for a fraction of that time). ;-( Ulitimately of course *all* the energy ends up as heat. What, even the stuff coming out as visible light / UV light? Of course not. That becomes pixie dust. -- Adam |
#62
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On 09/06/2021 19:05, Tim Lamb wrote:
In message , Robin writes On 09/06/2021 14:06, Tim Lamb wrote: In message , nightjar writes On 09/06/2021 09:39, ss wrote: ..."Sales of halogen lightbulbs are to be banned in the UK from September, with fluorescent lights to follow, under government climate change plans".... Apart from a few, rarely used, lamps that have yet to be changed, I have long converted everything to LED. *Hmm.. I have about 25 twin 5' florries in my workshop in 4 switched banks. This may be the moment to do the LED conversion. You have plenty of time to find 50 round tuits given they'll be phased out "from Sept 2023 onwards" Huh! Put up with an access tower on bare floor. Place is half full of fixed machinery now. Might be doable with an agile bloke from Doncaster:-) How high? -- Adam |
#63
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On 09/06/2021 19:58, Chris Green wrote:
Owain Lastname wrote: On Wednesday, 9 June 2021 at 15:19:56 UTC+1, Mark Carver wrote: There is also the theatre where halogen lamps are still in use in significant quantities. Operating theatres too? And vehicle headlights :-) Illegal for LED headlights at present, I believe. My motorbike has an LED headlight. I think it's *converting* to LED that's not allowed. When I looked into this, the issue was with cars and not bikes. You can fit LEDs to cars if there is some self-levelling of headlamp aim and headlamp wash-wipes. Those rules don't apply to bikes. I also read that these rules only apply to lamps above a certain light output. BICBW |
#64
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On Wed, 9 Jun 2021 19:57:35 +0100, Chris Green wrote:
T i m wrote: Ulitimately of course *all* the energy ends up as heat. What, even the stuff coming out as visible light / UV light? Yes, of course, what else do you think happens to the energy? I hadn't. ;-) Some of the light may go out of your windows So some (visible light) passing though my windows will heat the glass? and the resultant heat is lost from your house but the light will be absorbed by the atmosphere and disappated as heat there. Check. I 'got' that radiated IR would 'heat' whatever was in it's path till completely absorbed but I hadn't considered what would happen to visible light etc (but appreciated it contained energy etc). Ultimately a few photons worth of energy possibly escape into outer space I suppose. ;-) Cheers, T i m |
#65
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In article ,
Fredxx wrote: On 09/06/2021 17:45, T i m wrote: On Wed, 09 Jun 2021 16:35:31 +0100, "Dave Plowman (News)" wrote: In article , T i m wrote: On Wed, 09 Jun 2021 15:57:24 +0100, Scott wrote: snip Even better, you can get direct substitutes. I bought two four foot long LED tubes for the utility room, which fitted the existing ballast after replacing the starter with a dummy. I've *just* picked up a high output 5' LED florry replacement for a fitting in the study / workshop but the fitting is electronic so I'm going to have to bypass all the 'guts'. The main reason for doing it isn't (primarily) the light but the hope it will get rid of the mains hum ... ;-( Mains hum from an electronic ballast? Something not right there as they (should) run at a higher frequency to get rid of flicker. Agreed, however, the 'hum' clearly goes on and off with the light so if it's not from the fitting it's from the tube itself? Unfortunately I can't easily test the LED tube in there because it's an HF fitting. ;-( But then I did have similar with one of the 6' fittings in the kitchen that was the LED tube (I just thought I hadn't noticed it with the florry). Took all the guts out completely, that fitting with the second hand LED tube in it still hummed like a goodun? ;-( Two new LED tubes from TLC seemed to cure it. ;-) (I may be hypersensitive to 50hz because of my tinnitus). Most LED tube replacements specifically say they should not be fitted without the HF ballast first being removed. doesn't have to be removed - just disconnected. -- from KT24 in Surrey, England "I'd rather die of exhaustion than die of boredom" Thomas Carlyle |
#66
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![]() "Scott" wrote in message ... On Wed, 9 Jun 2021 12:20:16 +0100, nightjar wrote: On 09/06/2021 09:39, ss wrote: ..."Sales of halogen lightbulbs are to be banned in the UK from September, with fluorescent lights to follow, under government climate change plans".... Apart from a few, rarely used, lamps that have yet to be changed, I have long converted everything to LED. Me too, except for my bedside lamp which is halogen for colour rendition. Any comments on reading under a 230V LED spotlight? Would you go for cool, daylight or warm? People's preference on that varys dramatically. I'd get one you can vary like the Philips Hue. |
#67
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On Wed, 9 Jun 2021 15:24:17 +0100, Mark Carver
wrote: snip I doubt LEDs will work in our John Lewis 'touch sensitive/three level' bedside lamps. FWIW I put a dimmable LED lamp in mums 'touch sensitive three level' table lamp (and two similar used as bedside lights) and it/they worked fine? I can't imagine it was bought with LED compatibility in mind but it could have been LED compatible of course. They might have been bought from Homebase FWIW. snip Cheers, T i m |
#68
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On Wed, 9 Jun 2021 16:07:42 +0100, "tim..."
wrote: snip I put the CFL back in 5W LED is just too damned bright to be turning on whilst you are sleepy The fact that CFL often take a few seconds yo 'warm up' helps with that. makes of LED bulbs really ought to think about this Some of the LED lamps that come on and off automatically as driven from my Home Assistant system seem to 'ramp the on brightness' slightly (quickly) and much more visually down when turning off (compared when turning them off at the wall) so that change in functionality is probably because they are being used 'smart'? When they are off at the wall they are completely off (electrically) of course whereas when off from Home Assistant they are still powered but are set to zero light output. If you set them to come on via a remote of some sort you can gave them come on at whatever level is appropriate (and that could vary depending on the time of day) but still be turned up or down as required (same remote). Cheers, T i m |
#69
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On Thu, 10 Jun 2021 07:42:16 +1000, cantankerous trolling geezer Rodent
Speed, the auto-contradicting senile sociopath, blabbered, again: People's preference on that varys dramatically. I'd get one you can vary like the Philips Hue. Did I tell you already that you can shove your idiotic Philips Hue up your senile arse, just like your idiotPhone, your Alexa and your Google Maps? -- about senile Rot Speed: "This is like having a conversation with someone with brain damage." MID: |
#70
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On 09/06/2021 15:24, Mark Carver wrote:
On 09/06/2021 14:25, NY wrote: We tend to use Philips Hue for bedside lamps, and these can be set to anything from cool shady daylight (probably about 10000 K) to very warm tungsten (about 2000 K). I find that a sunlight temperature (about 4000-5000 K) is a good compromise. Supposedly warmer light than that is better for reading in an evening, so as not to stimulate the body to produce melatonin which can cause problems getting to sleep because the body sees it as daylight rather than "time to feel sleepy". I doubt LEDs will work in our John Lewis 'touch sensitive/three level' bedside lamps. (I notice the current version on their website* takes an LED bulb) I expect it's a single brightness lamp so no problems with dimming. My ASDA three brightness lamp failed so I replaced the touch circuit with an inline switch. Then I bought a replacement which was single brightness and took LED. Had to as it can only switch 4W. -- Max Demian |
#71
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![]() "tim..." wrote in message ... "Scott" wrote in message ... On Wed, 9 Jun 2021 12:20:16 +0100, nightjar wrote: On 09/06/2021 09:39, ss wrote: ..."Sales of halogen lightbulbs are to be banned in the UK from September, with fluorescent lights to follow, under government climate change plans".... Apart from a few, rarely used, lamps that have yet to be changed, I have long converted everything to LED. Me too, except for my bedside lamp which is halogen for colour rendition. I put the CFL back in 5W LED is just too damned bright to be turning on whilst you are sleepy makes of LED bulbs really ought to think about this Philips did with the Hues. You are free to have any brightness you like as the default with turn on and free to have it come on slowly like CFLs do too if you want. |
#72
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![]() "T i m" wrote in message ... On Wed, 09 Jun 2021 17:14:34 +0100, Scott wrote: On Wed, 09 Jun 2021 16:22:46 +0100, Scott wrote: On Wed, 09 Jun 2021 16:11:48 +0100, T i m wrote: On Wed, 09 Jun 2021 15:57:24 +0100, Scott wrote: snip Even better, you can get direct substitutes. I bought two four foot long LED tubes for the utility room, which fitted the existing ballast after replacing the starter with a dummy. I've *just* picked up a high output 5' LED florry replacement for a fitting in the study / workshop but the fitting is electronic so I'm going to have to bypass all the 'guts'. Did it not come with a replacement 'starter', which just shorts out the starter unit or does this only work with non-electronic ballasts (as mine was)? The main reason for doing it isn't (primarily) the light but the hope it will get rid of the mains hum ... ;-( It achieved that. PS Now I remember. I think it comes as two versions: one for electronic ballasts and one for non-electronic. Mine was the latter (which I think is easier). Yeah, the two I did for the kitchen were 'old skool' and I removed the ballast and cap completely on one and just wired it though the non-starter (because mine had 250mA fuses in them) and the other still has the ballast and cap in circuit (for now). Remembering this particular unit was HF got me thinking that I should have replaced the entire fitting for an LED one, however I think I'm better off saying with the 'tube' design as then I can swap out the tubes if they fail or if I want to change the usage (less bright, warmer etc) without replacing the entire unit. You don't have to with a decent led string, just tell it what you want color and brightness wise and set that as the new default. I'm probably also going to include that lamp into the HA with an occupancy sensor as I'm generally only turning it on when working in there or setting up the 3D printer. I'm getting too used to the hall, kitchen and landing lights going on and off automatically (movement / occupancy) it seems quite 'primitive to have to still turn some on and off yourself. ;-) Yeah, I'd never go back to physical switches again, dinosaur stuff. Mine can even be disabled so I can prowl around the house and see whats happening outside if I hear something unusual outside. |
#73
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On 09/06/2021 15:24, Mark Carver wrote:
On 09/06/2021 14:25, NY wrote: We tend to use Philips Hue for bedside lamps, and these can be set to anything from cool shady daylight (probably about 10000 K) to very warm tungsten (about 2000 K). I find that a sunlight temperature (about 4000-5000 K) is a good compromise. Supposedly warmer light than that is better for reading in an evening, so as not to stimulate the body to produce melatonin which can cause problems getting to sleep because the body sees it as daylight rather than "time to feel sleepy". I doubt LEDs will work in our John Lewis 'touch sensitive/three level' bedside lamps. (I notice the current version on their website* takes an LED bulb) I'll start stockpiling spare halogens for ours now.... Very wise. Dimmers intended for incandescent lamps tend to be leading edge. Even if it did work, I suspect the different non-linear characteristics would mean that the LED lamp wouldn't dim nearly as much as the halogen. I'm sure halogen will still be available in its guises, but not from the leading manufacturers, and so be of a somewhat variable quality. |
#74
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On 09/06/2021 23:03, T i m wrote:
On Wed, 9 Jun 2021 16:07:42 +0100, "tim..." wrote: snip I put the CFL back in 5W LED is just too damned bright to be turning on whilst you are sleepy The fact that CFL often take a few seconds yo 'warm up' helps with that. makes of LED bulbs really ought to think about this Some of the LED lamps that come on and off automatically as driven from my Home Assistant system seem to 'ramp the on brightness' slightly (quickly) and much more visually down when turning off (compared when turning them off at the wall) so that change in functionality is probably because they are being used 'smart'? I assume that would be a receiver function. Can you provide details of the lamp (systems) you're driving? Is this over Wi-Fi, over mains, or some other transmission medium? |
#75
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On 09/06/2021 22:33, charles wrote:
In article , Fredxx wrote: On 09/06/2021 17:45, T i m wrote: On Wed, 09 Jun 2021 16:35:31 +0100, "Dave Plowman (News)" wrote: In article , T i m wrote: On Wed, 09 Jun 2021 15:57:24 +0100, Scott wrote: snip Even better, you can get direct substitutes. I bought two four foot long LED tubes for the utility room, which fitted the existing ballast after replacing the starter with a dummy. I've *just* picked up a high output 5' LED florry replacement for a fitting in the study / workshop but the fitting is electronic so I'm going to have to bypass all the 'guts'. The main reason for doing it isn't (primarily) the light but the hope it will get rid of the mains hum ... ;-( Mains hum from an electronic ballast? Something not right there as they (should) run at a higher frequency to get rid of flicker. Agreed, however, the 'hum' clearly goes on and off with the light so if it's not from the fitting it's from the tube itself? Unfortunately I can't easily test the LED tube in there because it's an HF fitting. ;-( But then I did have similar with one of the 6' fittings in the kitchen that was the LED tube (I just thought I hadn't noticed it with the florry). Took all the guts out completely, that fitting with the second hand LED tube in it still hummed like a goodun? ;-( Two new LED tubes from TLC seemed to cure it. ;-) (I may be hypersensitive to 50hz because of my tinnitus). Most LED tube replacements specifically say they should not be fitted without the HF ballast first being removed. doesn't have to be removed - just disconnected. Quite. I've bypassed the ballasts in mine to save a few watts |
#76
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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In article ,
Fredxx wrote: When I looked into this, the issue was with cars and not bikes. You can fit LEDs to cars if there is some self-levelling of headlamp aim and headlamp wash-wipes. Those rules don't apply to bikes. I also read that these rules only apply to lamps above a certain light output. That could make more sense. But I think you're wrong. That is the problem with headlight regs. They don't mention light output. -- *A clear conscience is usually the sign of a bad memory * Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
#77
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On Thu, 10 Jun 2021 08:51:55 +1000, "Rod Speed"
wrote: snip Remembering this particular unit was HF got me thinking that I should have replaced the entire fitting for an LED one, however I think I'm better off saying with the 'tube' design as then I can swap out the tubes if they fail or if I want to change the usage (less bright, warmer etc) without replacing the entire unit. You don't have to with a decent led string, just tell it what you want color and brightness wise and set that as the new default. True, a 'smart' striplight ... but I don't suppose a 27W 5' one of those would be 16 pounds? I do actually have a self-adhesive stop of LEDS that give me colour and brightness that I was thinking of sticking up in the same place as this striplight (it's under a single bed that I built into the box-room wall and over a full width 1M deep desk) and I still might give it a go. It's an Aldi branded jobby and whilst I can fully control it on the Aldi (and other) apps, I can't (or I can't as yet) fully manage it in Home Assistant. I'm probably also going to include that lamp into the HA with an occupancy sensor as I'm generally only turning it on when working in there or setting up the 3D printer. I'm getting too used to the hall, kitchen and landing lights going on and off automatically (movement / occupancy) it seems quite 'primitive to have to still turn some on and off yourself. ;-) Yeah, I'd never go back to physical switches again, dinosaur stuff. ;-) Mine can even be disabled so I can prowl around the house and see whats happening outside if I hear something unusual outside. Yeah, I was going to setup something similar, an 'All lights on full' or 'All lights off' remote button but haven't as yet. I think I'll get some more of the little 'Trafdi' remotes because they are cheap, seem to work fairly well, seem to be pretty reliable, every good on batteries and are magnetically held onto their backing so can be lifted off. They also seem well supported in HA and I have already used them for controlling all sorts of things. I think they are (or were) 6 quid each or 10 quid if bought with an ES27 smart lamp? I'll probably get them with the lamps as 4 quid for a fairly bright / flexible lamp (you can change the colour temp and brightness ... and with a 3 yr warranty(?)) seems pretty good value? Cheers, T i m |
#78
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On 10/06/2021 00:18, Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
In article , Fredxx wrote: When I looked into this, the issue was with cars and not bikes. You can fit LEDs to cars if there is some self-levelling of headlamp aim and headlamp wash-wipes. Those rules don't apply to bikes. I also read that these rules only apply to lamps above a certain light output. That could make more sense. But I think you're wrong. That is the problem with headlight regs. They don't mention light output. I tried looking up the claim and have come to the conclusion I must have dreamt it. From: https://www.autobulbsdirect.co.uk/bl...gal-in-the-uk/ Please note that since January 2021, the MOT Inspection manual has been updated to include LED bulbs. Section 4.1.4 now states the following: Existing halogen headlamp units should not be converted to be used with high intensity discharge (HID) or light emitting diode (LED) bulbs. If such a conversion has been done, you must fail the headlamp. This is a brand new update that seems to only focus on headlights. There are no mentions to fail other LED bulbs such as brake lights, tail lights or reversing lights." |
#79
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On 09/06/2021 16:36, Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
I sort of assumed with a 1 metre dish it would be pretty tolerant. Find any one of the Astra group and the others would be OK. But not so - obviously. If you look at the full spectrum at 28E on an analyser and gently pull at the rim of the dish you can see some signals strengthen whilst others weaken. Bill |
#80
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On 09/06/2021 17:28, T i m wrote:
Ulitimately of course *all* the energy ends up as heat. What, even the stuff coming out as visible light / UV light? I suppose when it is absorbed it produces heat. Bill |
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