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CFLs JWS: “In
case you missed this
article, it describes the same disappointing experiences I have had with a
couple of dozen CFLs (which you have lauded from time to time).” ☞
I’ve had some die, too. The dimmable ones seem most
problematic. But most just keep burning and burning, saving a ton of
energy. That
said . . . $7 LEDs FOR
YOUR CANDLEABRA Bill Bruno: “OK these
are not very bright (billed to take the place of 40-watt bulbs) ... but 1.5
watts! And unlike CFLs they don’t put out all kinds of
radiofrequency interference, don’t have mercury, and don’t
have high frequency flicker.” ☞ And give off
no appreciable heat. I bought
4 for $40 with the shipping despite the fact that we have no candelabra.
(This
little converter solves that problem nicely for under $2.) It’s a stretch to say
they’re equivalent to a 40-watt incandescent. But one bulb is
enough to light a small room sufficiently to keep you from banging into
things. And one clamped
to a shelf just above my head makes for an acceptable reading light. Leaving all 4 on night and
day for a full year would cost about $6. Compared with $160 to run 4 40-watt
bulbs all year . . . a saving, if you have some reason to leave lights on all
year around the clock – which I hope you do not – of $154 a year on
a $40 investment. The saving is lower in
comparison with CFLs, but still significant. This brand is not recommended
for dimmers. SIMPLE ELECTRIC MATH An
easy benchmark from which to make back of the envelope estimates: One
Watt, One year, One dollar For residential customers in
the U.S., the average price of electricity has recently been at $0.115 per
kilowatt-hour. This works out to almost exactly $1 per Watt-year: Leave
a 100 Watt light bulb on for a year, pay $100. I found this
surprising when I calculated it. The number is simple, memorable, and
encourages conservation. Pass it on. ☞ Pass it on,
indeed. (A kilowatt is 1,000
watts. Draw 1,000 watts for 1 hour, and you’ve consumed 1
kilowatt-hour. As there are roughly 9 thousand hours in a year, running
1 watt all year requires 9 kilowatt-hours of electricity, which at 11 cents or
so each costs $1.) LED-LIT SHEEP But how exactly did
they get sheep to do this?
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