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On 8/9/13 18:48 , Joe from Kokomo wrote:
On 8/9/2013 2:33 PM, D. Peter Maus wrote: So far, I"m getting the equivalent of 75w incandescent light out of one 8.5W LED lamp. The URL/ ad that you quoted said: Stock Code: ETI-520163MD 8.5 Watt - LED Light Bulb - Omni-Directional A19 - 3000K Warm White - 600 Lumens - 50 Watt Equal They advertise it a 50 watt equivalent but you are saying it's the same as 75 watts. If it really is close to 75, one would think they would not be shy and call it 75. Are you actually measuring the lumen output or just "eyeballing" it? Do you have higher than 'normal' line voltage? Not pickin' on ya, D.P. It's just that inquiring minds want to know why the difference. :-) Dial it back, Joe. I did mention that I used a light meter to measure the output. Were you not reading? White LEDs do not directly produce light, like a single color LED. They produce a wavelength and expose it to a phosphor which causes the phosphor to flouresce. Since that's a ablative process, the output of a white LED diminishes over time, depending on how hard the phosphor is worked. White LED lamps are correctly rated at an average luminary output over time. I'm at the beginning of these lamps' life cycle. So output is higher than rated. |
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