No doubt Brussels Sprout has been medlin again.
They all seem to be 42, 65 etc watts.
Fortunately, there is a little shop in our town that sells nothing but light bulbs of all shapes and sizes, AND of the old style wattage.



qbman1 wrote:Have they reconnected your electricity supply then Stephen ?


qbman1 wrote:It's Benefit Street all over again !

You should be so lucky......we have to make do with candlesStephen wrote:qbman1 wrote:Have they reconnected your electricity supply then Stephen ?
Not yet. I'm still hooked up to next doors

Why was the first thing that came into my head "fork handles"Onelife wrote:we have to make do with candles




Mervyn and Trish wrote:Lumens seems to be the new currency, which ought to be logical as it is a measure of light rather than power consumption, but I must admit to finding it a bit baffling after all these years of watts. And having converted a lot of our lights to LEDs I really can't get used to the idea of 5 watt bulbs giving enough light for anything, but they do! I'm just assuming I'll be able to afford an extra cruise each year on all the money I'm saving

Quizzical Bob wrote:In my experience if it says something like '10W equivalent to 40W' then its light output is equivalent to a 10W incandescent bulb. After warming up for 10 minutes, that is.

They are getting better but the light fromm the LEDs is harsh and at the wrong end of the spectrum. I should declare an interest here as I buy several million LEDs a year, not for general lighting I hasten to add.Not so ancient mariner wrote:Quizzical Bob wrote:In my experience if it says something like '10W equivalent to 40W' then its light output is equivalent to a 10W incandescent bulb. After warming up for 10 minutes, that is.
I would tend to agree with you with regard to the original 'energy saving' bulbs. But the more recent LED bulbs are a huge improvement
on these, and every bit as bright as the old fashioned ones.

I would agree on the older ones QB. But the ones we've bought recently to replace halogen spots are indistinguishable from the old ones, other than in their consumption of electricity,Quizzical Bob wrote:They are getting better but the light fromm the LEDs is harsh and at the wrong end of the spectrum. I should declare an interest here as I buy several million LEDs a year, not for general lighting I hasten to add.Not so ancient mariner wrote:Quizzical Bob wrote:In my experience if it says something like '10W equivalent to 40W' then its light output is equivalent to a 10W incandescent bulb. After warming up for 10 minutes, that is.
I would tend to agree with you with regard to the original 'energy saving' bulbs. But the more recent LED bulbs are a huge improvement
on these, and every bit as bright as the old fashioned ones.

I thought that I had seen that you can now get them in several "whites"Quizzical Bob wrote:They are getting better but the light fromm the LEDs is harsh and at the wrong end of the spectrum.

david63 wrote:I thought that I had seen that you can now get them in several "whites"Quizzical Bob wrote:They are getting better but the light fromm the LEDs is harsh and at the wrong end of the spectrum.

You have to be careful which type you buy:Mervyn and Trish wrote:I would agree on the older ones QB. But the ones we've bought recently to replace halogen spots are indistinguishable from the old ones, other than in their consumption of electricity,






