I am most impressed by the 900 lumens. This is a true 60 watt replacement, unlike the LEDs that claim to be 60 watt replacements, but actually output far less lumens, and claim "it's OK, the light is directional, so it counts for more".
And the 10 watt is impressive too - that's better than CFLs (13 watt), which is not something I've seen before in an LED.
Most commercial LEDs in the market today (and by market I mean physical stores, not specialty online places) are worse than CFLs in a lumens/watt measure. (And they rarely actually tell you the true lumens.)
I'm not personally willing to pay more than about $5 for such a bulb, but the price will come down. (Since I can get 10,000 hour CFLs for $2.)
Edit: Maybe I will pay more - those 3 watts in savings add up to about $11 over the 25,000 hour life of the bulb.
You can definitely find smaller CFLs. My house is old and has a lot of places where there used to be gas lamps and instead tiny electric lamps have been put in, so I have several 8, 10, and 13 watt CFLs in my house. I think I got almost all of them at either Lowes or Costco.
> The question is how much and how long will it last in reality.
Same goes for the CFL bulbs. For me the failure rate was so high that I started writing the date on the base of the CFL every time I install a new one(1). Average lifetime of a CFL bulb so far: 9 months. A very far cry from the promised lifetime.
(1) I don't buy the cheap knock-offs at the local Big Box Store. I get top-of-the-line Sylvanias and Phillips CFL's. No difference -- they die just as fast as the cheap ones do.
> I'm not buying a $40 bulb, even from Philips, unless it has a 20 year warranty.
Even if it has a 20 year warranty, that's not much good because the cost of using the warranty exceeds the value of product replacement. (Do you keep receipts and product packages long enough? Then there's the hassle of doing the return.)
After more than a year's use I've only had one failure of cheap CFL I bought in a package of 6 or so (for only about $60US at Wallys/Sams or some such). I wouldn't have paid $4/ea, but at <$2/ea they were hardly more expensive than tungsten.
I have two LED bulbs like this by Philips. The 12.5w (60w replacement) and the 17w (75w replacement). I like them both a lot, and think both brightness and light quality are good enough for everyday use. Bonus: They apparently don't attract bugs because they produce less UV light than incandescents.
This seems to be an iteration on an 800lm/12.5W version which they examined in [detail][]. There is an incredible amount of electronics packed into these things but they seem to do a better job than CFLs of replacing ye olde tungsten-filament-in-argon-filled-flask.
The yellow plastic of the Philips bulb not just a bulb-like cover
over the LEDs, but the phosphor itself. ... The bulb is able to
make use of the remote phosphor’s characteristic of emitting light
omni-directionally and uniformly, rather than as a point source
such as in a standard white LED.
Good for them! I have one of these at home, and of the various LED bulbs I've tried this is the only one that worked well enough to be a true incandescent replacement.
[+] [-] ars|14 years ago|reply
And the 10 watt is impressive too - that's better than CFLs (13 watt), which is not something I've seen before in an LED.
Most commercial LEDs in the market today (and by market I mean physical stores, not specialty online places) are worse than CFLs in a lumens/watt measure. (And they rarely actually tell you the true lumens.)
I'm not personally willing to pay more than about $5 for such a bulb, but the price will come down. (Since I can get 10,000 hour CFLs for $2.)
Edit: Maybe I will pay more - those 3 watts in savings add up to about $11 over the 25,000 hour life of the bulb.
[+] [-] simonsarris|14 years ago|reply
Here is a GE one: http://www.amazon.com/Lighting-Compfluo-85382-Compact-Fluore...
Though of all the ones I tested the Sylvania seem to have the most pleasant color temperature, and online I can only find their 13W ones.
[+] [-] ck2|14 years ago|reply
My last "forever" led bulb just died, it lasted 3 years.
I'm not buying a $40 bulb, even from Philips, unless it has a 20 year warranty.
I think I am going to try this one next, $15 but available in soft-while intead of just pure white and it's assembled in the USA supposedly: http://www.goldengadgets.com/gt-7d-7-watt-led-globe-light-bu...
Note the helpful chart on that page halfway to the bottom (should be near the top!)
[+] [-] jerhewet|14 years ago|reply
Same goes for the CFL bulbs. For me the failure rate was so high that I started writing the date on the base of the CFL every time I install a new one(1). Average lifetime of a CFL bulb so far: 9 months. A very far cry from the promised lifetime.
(1) I don't buy the cheap knock-offs at the local Big Box Store. I get top-of-the-line Sylvanias and Phillips CFL's. No difference -- they die just as fast as the cheap ones do.
[+] [-] anamax|14 years ago|reply
Even if it has a 20 year warranty, that's not much good because the cost of using the warranty exceeds the value of product replacement. (Do you keep receipts and product packages long enough? Then there's the hassle of doing the return.)
[+] [-] MediaBehavior|14 years ago|reply
[+] [-] samgranger|14 years ago|reply
[+] [-] MikeCapone|14 years ago|reply
[+] [-] MikeCapone|14 years ago|reply
http://www.treehugger.com/files/2011/03/philips-ambientled-l...
[+] [-] noibl|14 years ago|reply
[detail]: http://www.edn.com/blog/PowerSource/40511-Philips_LED_bulb_T...
[+] [-] ashmud|14 years ago|reply
[+] [-] sbierwagen|14 years ago|reply
1: http://www.cypress.com/?docID=25961
[+] [-] chaostheory|14 years ago|reply
[+] [-] kerridge0|14 years ago|reply
[+] [-] gamble|14 years ago|reply
[+] [-] dmd|14 years ago|reply
[+] [-] samgranger|14 years ago|reply
[+] [-] chaostheory|14 years ago|reply