If you were worried the the Easy-Bake oven would meet its demise with the phase-out of incandenscent lamps, your worries are over:
Lights Out for Easy-Bake Oven Isn't a Tragedy
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If you were worried the the Easy-Bake oven would meet its demise with the phase-out of incandenscent lamps, your worries are over:
Lights Out for Easy-Bake Oven Isn't a Tragedy
That's too bad. They should have an oven that bakes crappy food like the old ones did.
Been having the urge to go buy a rock tumbler lately. Can't quite figure it out, but the urge is there.:dunno:
The phase out of incandescents is bullshit. I will continue to buy and use incandescents.
I use nothing but CFLs and I will go LED as soon as it's more affordable.
Speaking of Easy Bake Ovens, I wonder if they still recommend Easy Off to clean the plastic parts. Once.
http://cgi.ebay.com/ebaymotors/36-SM...item1c1f0bd3f2
These are powered on 12V at about 1/2 amp and put out a hell of a lot of light. I put them in the dome of the car. Our grandkids complain that they are too bright. 30 years ago, I would have never believed that anyone would complain that LED's were "too bright". We have one as a front porch light. And I have one in the basement hallway. The real problem with them is that they are fairly small and the light is not well diffused. But with a 1A 12V supply, you can run a couple of these and get a whole lot of light. A half amp at 12V is like the old baby night light only much brighter and a lot less power.
How do you make this "light" ?? I haven't discovered fire yet. :-D
Actually my preference for lighting is mostly 1940's technology. I am a big fan of straight tube florescent lighting. I prefer the "daylight" or "cool white" varieties. For outdoor or garage lighting I prefer HID lighting i.e. mercury vapour or metal halide or sodium vapour. In my garage I use a combo of mercury vapour, straight tube florescent, and CFL. At my desk/office I use straight tube florescent (daylight), and circline florescent. I have a couple of CFL's but rarely turn them on. Come to think of it I hardly use any incandescent s at all.
However, there are some people in this household who don't like CFL's and find the incandescent light more pleasing. Other applications where I need incandescent are appliances, decorative chandeliers, dimmable fixtures, fixtures where nothing else will fit.
I've experimented with LED's but for general lighting they suck AFAIC. They are good for signal lights, indicators, flashlights, hobby use, electronics, lasers, etc.
Ditto. I bought a big box of of GE CFL's from Home Depot at least a couple of years ago. I've had one fizzle out, but I returned it to Home Depot without even a tiny bit of hassle. If Home Depot and GE continue to honor their warranty, I will not need to buy another lightbulb for 20 years.
I do worry about the pollution CFLs create when they're just thrown away and not properly recycled. :dunno:
CFLs don't work worth a shit in the oven and really stink above 350 degrees.
I have mom's house 90% converted to CFL's... exceptions being refrigerator, freezer, dryer, oven and 2 dimmable ceiling fans (they STILL haven't perfected dimmable or temperature extreme durable CFLs or LEDs as yet). Backyard lighting is HP-Na, front motion sensors are CFL floodlights. Probably shaves a good $30-40/mo off of the bill. I may convert the front yard motion sensor back to halogen or LED (if suitable ones are available) before winter...they don't stay on long, and when the temperature gets below 45º +/-, it takes forever for the CFLs to warm up.
The lighting that I've always liked is that on a vintage train -- the lights that look like they're lit with about half the voltage they're made for. That soft glowing ball inside the fixture makes me feel like I'm on the 20th Century Limited shacking up with Eve Marie Saint!
As much as I hate how they turned Grand Central into a soul-less shopping mall, at least some of the lights -- particularly those in the awnings by the entrances -- still have that look.
My OF eyes never noticed that. But with 12' ceilings I'm predisposed to LOVE CFL's.
I've noticed the same thing, particularly with the ones out in my unheated shop/shack. They are most definitely temperature sensitive—in the summer, they come to full brightness almost immediately but whenever it drops below 60° F (16° C, 288° K) it can take up to five minutes before they've reached their full output.
I am testing some of the new LED bulbs. Pricey as all hell, but lower wattage than CFL and last longer. Best of all, the color temperature on the ones I have been testing is better than most CFLs. Two lamp style medium-base bulbs in 60-watt equivalent (850 lumens at 13 watts) I am now using cost $30 each at Home Depot. I should also mention they are shaped like ordinary bulbs, and not fragile, coiled glass tubes (which can be hard to grasp to change in recessed ceiling applications).
They are rated to last "23 years" (wish I were), which may be bullshit but is better by far than either incandescent or CFL. They are also available in flood and spot style with medium bases -- important for me since the houses I am now looking at have cathedral ceilings over much of the living area with recessed fixtures, and the bulbs are twelve to sixteen feet above the floor.
I don't do "high" very well and I have no intention of futzing with bulbs at that altitude, oxygen masks or no. Neither will I happily pay some handy-bozo to change them.
Dat be because you are not smokin' de Ganja, mon!
http://www.cannabisculture.com/libra...-side-view.jpg
How many hippies does it take to change a light bulb?
Fuck it, we'll smoke in the dark!
Maybe you can make a bulb changing adapter for the end of the 80M vertical.
Do CFL"s make good dummy loads?
It looks like something Richard Simmons would buy. ;)
Actually the premise of this article is incorrect. Incandescent lights are not being "phased out". Certain wattage's used for standard lighting applications simply have to meet certain efficiency requirements such as x candella's per watt where x is greater than the present values. In addition, there are tons of exceptions to the bans for things like 3-way bulbs, left hand threaded bulbs, utility bulbs, flood lights, dimmable bulbs, display bulbs, colored bulbs, rough service lamps, industrial service lamps, signal and pilot lamps, decorative lamps, candelabra lamps. miniature lamps, Low V lamps, military bulbs, and about a million and one other exceptions. The way I see it, incandescent s will be available for a very long time to come.
In addition, want to make an incandescent last forever ? Run it at a slightly lower voltage than it is rated. Damned things last forever. Check out the "Centennial Bulb" in Livermore California.
http://www.centennialbulb.org/
With all the new regs and BS, I have a feeling that if Edison were still alive, he'd say fuck it, you can work by candle light.