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![]() "Jim Lux" wrote in message ... Based on my admittedly anecdotal data, there's a fair amount of manufacturing variability, so unless someone is going to go out and collect data on a statistically significant sample (which practically means tens or hundreds of units tested), any set of measurements is valid only for the item measured. Well, my report is certainly anecdotal. No measurements beyond turning on the AM radio and bringing it up close to the lights were made. However, I can believe that perhaps the electrician got a bad batch of lights. Maybe the ground was missing or some filter or something like that. However, it is highly unlikely that the (good) Hera lights happened to be totally quiet due to some manufacturing variability. In other words, manufacturing variabilities can and frequently do result in really bad units, but rarely result in phenomenally better units than the norm. What this tells me is that the Heras have a better controlled manufacturing process. If that's all you got from my post, then I submit that that is a valuable data point. (The web site of the "bad" lights says that they are California Title 24 compliant. I have no idea what that means.) Let's put it this way: given my merely anecdotal experience, if you had to buy undercabinet lighting tomorrow, which would you buy? That's all you can get from anecdotal evidence. |
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