I write the date on the bulb when I install them.
I do this. I used to have a spreadsheet where i'd track which bulb was replaced at what time. But i'd forget to update it, so it became worse than nothing.
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I write the date on the bulb when I install them.
Although they don't last anywhere near as long as their guarantee, they do last way longer than the old incandescent bulbs. This being said, I'm not about to hold onto receipts for my light bulb purchases and keep up a spreadsheet to get my replacements.
If you've ever bought the little 2 watt-ish LED night lights, they might last forever.
I've always felt any kind of bulb does not last as long as advertised in a ceiling fan. I just assume it is due to constant vibration.
This.Also enclosed fixtures. Most of them will say not to use them in enclosed fixtures but most people will anyway. The heat decreases the lifespan of the bulbs internals.
My neighbor told me that he gets his from Costco and has been happy with their performance.
So annoying. We have several ceiling fixtures flat mounted with three bulbs. Seems every other week I'm replacing one bulb at a time.Same. They don’t completely die, but they start flickering. Which is annoying enough that they get replaced.
My good electrician friend said the same thing. LEDS don’t like being turned on/offAnother reason is being turned off and on frequently.
Ok... again, the LED power supplies might not like being turns on/off, but the LED itself is being turned on/off constantly. That's part of their power saving tricks.My good electrician friend said the same thing. LEDS don’t like being turned on/off
Ok... again, the LED power supplies might not like being turns on/off, but the LED itself is being turned on/off constantly. That's part of their power saving tricks.
Leds run off of DC (mostly, kinda). Your house has 120v AC. So you've gotta get that voltage in line with what the LED wants. There's lots of different ways to do this with various tradeoffs (heat, efficiency, cost, size).
As long as you're not feeding the LED voltage or current that's out of its range, they have super long lifetimes. They have really high tolerance of abuse (temperature, on/off cycles, etc). It's almost always the power supplies and their designs that have issues.
Yeah, it's a me problem. LED bulbs have 2 major components. I just think the majority of the population thinks it's the diode that goes bad when it reality it's a manufacturing or bottom line problem with companies cheaping out on the other parts of the bulb.That's the problem though, right? The voltage rectifier goes bad, often due to overheating.
This post is worthless without pictures...I haven't found a single brand that last as long they're supposed to. I converted the entire house to LED a number of years ago and I haven't seen a single benefit. I've tried Feit (menards), Phillips, Sylvania and GE. They all burn out with a year or so.
I also made the mistake of not buying extra fixtures when I converted the boob lights and cans over. Trying to find a match is going to suck when they start burning out.