LED Lights

Although this is a bit off-topic, your website is a bit too much hard work for me. No offence meant, but I'm not going to download a stack of PDFs and trawl through them. Would be way better if you had well categorized lists of your products right on the site. It would also make your site a lot more search engine friendly.

+1

I gave up when I saw the huge downloads
 
Although this is a bit off-topic, your website is a bit too much hard work for me. No offence meant, but I'm not going to download a stack of PDFs and trawl through them. Would be way better if you had well categorized lists of your products right on the site. It would also make your site a lot more search engine friendly.

+1

I gave up when I saw the huge downloads

Goobie and rsd,
please send me your email addresses to
[email protected]
and i will send you the 2 catalogues.

ps:
http://af.reuters.com/article/topNews/idAFJOE66R0NW20100728
 
Any update Jola?

http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=140410447227&ssPageName=STRK:MEWAX:IT

I have ordered a few, will check them out - 280 lumens is quite bright, they should be good.

Specification:

4 Watts.
20 x 5050 SMD superbright LEDs.
Colour: warm white (colour temperature 2700K-3500K).
Standard 2 pin fitting.
Lens diameter 5cm; length 5.5cm (standard GU10 bulb size).
Approx. life 50,000 hours.
Light output: 280 lumen.
Comparable to 50W halogen.
Aluminium body.
Glass cover.
Voltage: 240V.
Beam angle: 120°.
C.E. approved and RoHS compliant.
Bulbs packed in individual retail boxes.
Note: LED bulbs should not be used with dimmer switches.
 
Note: LED bulbs should not be used with dimmer switches.

ROFLMAO

. . . . . . .

4 years ago, that was correct.

2 years ago the factories started to make dimmable LED's,
some with their own transformers for the 12V types,
some able to dim with standard wall dimmers.
the non-dimmables were cheaper than the dimmables.

currently non-dimmables are being phased out due to the demand for dimmable LED's.
 
Any update Jola?

Yes, those 280 lumens SMD LED's turned out to be pretty good, and are about as bright as a 50w halogen light.

I originally only ordered 3 lights, but then ordered 5 more and now have 8 of these in my kitchen.

They are expensive, but I think that they are worth it.
 
The amount of misinformation regarding LED's amazes me. A 50W halogen produces more 800 lumen. Therefore, for a LED fixture to be a 50W equivalent, it needs to generate at least 700 lumen, surely?

And I can tell you now, such a device does not exist at the moment! I had a conversation with a local vendor, trying to convince me that their 10W LED, which produces 1200 lux at 1m from a 30deg beam, is equivalent to a 50W halogen producing 2600 Lux at 1m, from a 38deg beam. That's 260lumen versus 880 lumen!!!! More like a 20W replacement....

Earlier today I tried to get guaranteed fixture lumen output from a Chinese vendor on a 6W device, proclaimed to be a 50W replacement. The fixture output turned out to be 30% less than claimed.

Things to watch out for:
1 ) Lumen output claimed is for the LED's, usually cool white, which produces more. And then ignores the lens loss.
2) Wattage numbers mean very little... Lumen/w mean more, but only if it is at the temp(K) you need, and of the fixture, not LED.
3) Check the Lux rating, from which the lumen can be extracted, give the beam angle and distance: lumen = 2*pi*r^2*(1-cos(beamangle/2/57.3))*lux
or use this online calc: http://www.ledrise.com/shop_content.php?coID=19
4) High wattage fixtures need to dump more heat - if not, don't expect 50000hrs.

As said in a tv series long ago: "Be careful out there". There are a lot of snake-oil salesmen.
Ian
 
The amount of misinformation regarding LED's amazes me. A 50W halogen produces more 800 lumen. Therefore, for a LED fixture to be a 50W equivalent, it needs to generate at least 700 lumen, surely?

I don't know, I have 280 lumen SMD LED's (GU10's) installed, and visually they give the same light as a 50w halogen.

Maybe if you measure it, it would be slightly less, but it's not noticeable. So I'm happy with those, at about R180 each.
 
Sounds pretty good. Pity about the dimmer thing, all of mine are on dimmer switches, although I could change that in a few places.

Price is quite high, but you do tend to get what you pay for. Please post a follow up when you've received them and tested them out!

Hey RSD. You do know that you can order dimmable LED downlights and LED Bulbs? All one needs is a Bell-Push Dimmer module to compliment your current dimmer switch. This will properly modulate the voltage to the dimmable lights.
 
Smd light stays on?

I bought the mr16 21 led cool white and they are good for very small room ssuch as toilet/bathroom
Now this is my problem - i bought a 48 led (3528) smd off ebay, got it today but when i connect it the light turns on but very dim, and when i switch the light on it is fine. In other words when i turn my light off the smd bulb is still on but very dim. Is everyones like this. I dont mind it staying on dim but it might shorten its life?
Thanks
 
I bought the mr16 21 led cool white and they are good for very small room ssuch as toilet/bathroom
Now this is my problem - i bought a 48 led (3528) smd off ebay, got it today but when i connect it the light turns on but very dim, and when i switch the light on it is fine. In other words when i turn my light off the smd bulb is still on but very dim. Is everyones like this. I dont mind it staying on dim but it might shorten its life?
Thanks

Hello Abid,
it could be 2 things:
1: your LED is "on but very dim" is due to the LED getting current from somewhere else. probably some sort of short circuit, but not enough to trip the breaker. the live connection on the light fitting/socket is picking up live current after the switch from the live incoming connection and then its "leaking" throught earth or neutral, and the LED is sensitive enough to be able to give a very dim light output.
2: i take it these are downlights (MR16 or GU10).
take the lights out and rotate them 180 deg so that the pins connect to the other contact. again the LED's are so sensitive that if the "live" pin on the globe connects to the "neutral" contact in the socket the LED starts to light up, "but very dim".

my garage motor light does the same with one of my LED globes.
 
Be careful of having the power source far from the LED if they run off 12V - the low voltage and high power consumption imply high current flow and thus a greater voltage drop through the transmission line (voltage drop = I²R). For 20W at 12V, you need about 1.7A of current, so you lose (1.7)² times the resistance of the wire in voltage. This at drop in voltage would dim the LED and also heat up the transmission line.
 
Anyone know what the correct import tax is on LED bulbs ?

SARS usually just charge VAT, but the last time it was 20% plus VAT, of course.

As if local manufacturers need protection, they don't exist !


Sent from the MyBroadband iPhone App
 
LED bulbs not as eco-friendly as some might think

http://www.gizmag.com/led-bulbs-fou...aign=f4889c9454-UA-2235360-4&utm_medium=email

LED light bulbs are becoming increasingly popular with designers and consumers of green technology, as they use less electricity, last longer, and emit more light on a pound-for-pound basis than traditional incandescent bulbs. However, while it may be tempting to look at them as having solved the problem of environmentally-unfriendly lighting, researchers from the University of California would advise against such thinking
 
Interestingly, I've just ordered a batch of MR16 and GU10 6W WW LED's from my supplier in China...

If you use them to replace 50W halogens (not exactly a lumen for lumen swop, I know:)), in a 8hr/day, 6 day/wk business scenario, they will pay for themselves in .48 years, or less than 6 months!!!

A 200% ROI - beat that anywhere!!!

A no brainer for any business!
 
Hi there,

Does anyone know of a supplier in Pretoria that stocks these globes and has anyone tried the led tubes that are supposed to replace florescent tubes?

Thanks
Frank
 
Top
Sign up to the MyBroadband newsletter
X