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    Besides Aerotech bulbs, what other brands are made in U.S.A.?

    Sleep and Light
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    • Tungsten_smoothT
      Tungsten_smooth
      last edited by

      Aerotech bulbs are great, and I love them, even though they are a bit dimmer than their thin tungsten counterparts by Sylvania and others. Are there any good LED bulbs made in the U.S.A.? You can't really screw up an Incandescent bulb, just alter the brightness or put a coat on it. With LED it's completely different and Philips seems to be leading the pack.

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      • TwoCablesT
        TwoCables
        last edited by TwoCables

        They're dimmer because it would require more power to get the same brightness due to having the thicker filament (the thicker it is, the more power is required to get the same brightness). They don't do that because technically, these are just rough service bulbs. Of course, you know my opinion: their 20,000-hour incandescent bulbs should be the only light bulbs on the planet.

        It's not because they're made in the U.S.A., it's because they're made properly. You CAN screw up an incandescent light bulb, and I think all the major manufacturers prove that with each and every bulb they make because they only last what, 1,000 to 2,000 hours whereas Aerotech's last 20,000. You've held these in your hand, you've looked at them up close, so surely you can agree. GE and all the other incandescent manufacturers make extremely low-quality junk. They're out to make a quick buck, and they got the world fooled into thinking that these are the best. Aero-Tech sells a 2-pack of their 20,000-hour incandescent bulbs for around $5.00 at Menards. Most LED lamps last roughly 20,000 and look how much just ONE costs. "Oh, but it pays for itself" Yeah, well what about the low quality of light?

        Now, a "good" LED lamp is subjective. What exactly do you mean? I don't think flicker-free LED lights exist, so that's why I'm sticking to incandescent (they have a smooth analog pulsating wave of light). If you mean "equal to these 20,000-hour bulbs", then that might be tough because the reason they're as good as they are is, these are "rough service". It's funny to me how it takes the need for an extremely tough and extremely long-lasting "rough service" lamp to get a lamp like these created. They should be the standard by which all other incandescent lamps are judged.

        So, I personally don't know of any high-end or very high-quality LED lamps, but I don't want to find any either unless they can prove with extremely slow-motion video that they don't blink but instead they glow like a steady flame. Until a lighting technology is created that's extremely efficient and low heat that glows like a steady flame, I'll keep using incandescent lighting.

        Tungsten_smoothT 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • Tungsten_smoothT
          Tungsten_smooth @TwoCables
          last edited by Tungsten_smooth

          @TwoCables

          don't think flicker-free LED lights exist

          Well you would be incorrect as a regular single color led like blue, yellow green, and red should not (but can) flicker. There are lots of led bulbs that do not flicker but they either don't produce the correct spectrum, or are great but expensive.

          I want to link you to a page with lots of LED bulbs color spectrum. You'll see one that very closely matches an Incandescent bulb.

          As for the important factor of flicker, that is not listed.

          http://www.designingwithleds.com/light-spectrum-charts-data/

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          • TwoCablesT
            TwoCables
            last edited by

            Yeah, I would only be interested in LED lamps (I refuse to call them "bulbs") that are 100% flicker-free - and it would need to be proved by super slow-motion video.

            Tungsten_smoothT 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • Tungsten_smoothT
              Tungsten_smooth @TwoCables
              last edited by

              @TwoCables we'll get there, hopefully soon.

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              • E
                Elhem Enohpi
                last edited by Elhem Enohpi

                LEDs - even white ones - are inherently flicker-free. They run from DC (direct current), like from a battery. If fed from a properly regulated and filtered power supply, they will glow steadier than any flame.

                I have no idea what kind of power supply is inside a cheap LED lamp, but if it's flickering, it's only because it's lacking a 20-cent capacitor. There's no reason why it should be expensive to manufacture a 100% flicker-free LED bulb. You could even build your own from parts, for very little money.

                Adding a dimmer circuit is another story, because they work by rapidly turning the LED on and off, and varying the time that it's on vs. off.

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                • lornaL
                  lorna
                  last edited by

                  @Elhem-Enohpi some of them use PWM dimming, but some use analog dimming with just a reduced current. There are ups and downs for both. PWM is a nightmare for people with a high flicker fusion threshold like me. There are ways to shape the current that look much better.

                  @lorna

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                  • E
                    Elhem Enohpi @lorna
                    last edited by

                    @lorna Oh sure, I didn't mean to imply that all dimmer circuits flicker, there are better ones. Just saying that all LEDs are flicker-free, if fed with straight DC.

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                    • Tungsten_smoothT
                      Tungsten_smooth @TwoCables
                      last edited by

                      @TwoCables Do NOT buy the Philips "SlimStyle" bulbs, I've seen they use a 240Hz flicker, so I never bought those--I bet the color isn't very good either. Also currently, don't use any Cree bulbs, or check with reviews that do study flicker before you buy. Yes there are video reviews that check for flicker, and I hope more people start doing that!

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