Friday, November 9, 2012

Lights in Shining Armor

Switch LED light bulbs. Switch LED light bulbs

Courtesy Switch.

Last year I visited Switch Lighting, a small Silicon Valley company that claimed to have built something revolutionary. Switch?s product: a light bulb that produced the same warm, comforting glow that we associate with Edison?s enduring incandescent bulb but lasts 20 times longer and uses a fraction of the energy. It was beautiful, too. A pear-shaped glass orb that sat atop a shiny metallic heatsink, the Switch bulb looked like a work of art. Best of all, it was remarkably affordable. The Switch bulb was going to cost $20, but over its 20-year-lifespan?yes, 20 years!?it would save you almost $100 in energy over an incandescent bulb.

I was won over. In my story??The World?s Greatest Light Bulb??I promised that when the Switch bulbs went on sale in the fall of 2011, I?d be buying them for my house. I wasn?t the only one who was thrilled by the prospect of a perfect light bulb. Wired put the same Switch bulb that I?d hailed on its cover. There was only tiny problem with the bulb that Wired and I went gaga for: It was never released. The company says that it ran into unforeseen manufacturing challenges, and late last year it had to go back to the drawing board. The firm completely redesigned the bulb with an eye to making it easier to manufacture. The good news is that the newly designed Switch bulb is now on sale. You can pick one up at a Batteries Plus store near you.

The bad news is that the Switch isn?t the perfect bulb. For one thing, rather than $20, a Switch bulb that?s equivalent to a 60-watt incandescent now costs $50. What?s more, in my testing, the Switch bulb?s glow doesn?t quite match the quality of light put out by an incandescent bulb. And it?s not just Switch: Over the last few days, I?ve been testing four different LED light bulbs that are now available for sale. I found them all to be pretty good, but each was one notch short of perfect. Considering that you?ll be spending a lot of money on these bulbs and using them until around the time Malia Obama runs for president, you?d be wise to hold off buying any LED bulb right now. Next year, they?ll be much closer to perfect.

The lighting industry has been trying to come up with an energy-efficient replacement for the incandescent bulb for a long time now. The pursuit has lately become more urgent, since federal energy regulations are scheduled to limit the sales of old-school bulbs. In October, 100-watt incandescents were banned. Seventy-five-watt bulbs are scheduled to be discontinued next year, and 60-watt bulbs, which comprise the bulk of the home market, will be banned in 2014.

At the moment, the main alternative to the incandescent is the compact fluorescent, but lots of people don?t like these bulbs. I?m one of them. Most CFLs are ugly, contain trace amounts of mercury, and put out a harsh, whitish light that feels clinical. Hordes of CFL-loving readers attacked my stance on these bulbs, pointing out that ?covered? CFLs look just as good as regular bulbs, and also produce warm, yellow light. Indeed, in scientific tests, some CFLs have been shown to produce light that people like more than incandescents. Alas, I still blanch at the sight of CFLs?but if you don?t, your perfect bulb is already here.

Tuwago Dimmable A19 LED Bulb with Samsung® LEDs. Tuwago dimmable A19 LED bulb with Samsung? LEDs

Courtesy Tuwago/Amazon.

For the rest of us, the best hope for matching incandescent bulbs is with LEDs, which are semiconductors that produce light. The quest to turn LEDs into the perfect bulb has dominated the lighting industry over the last few years.

So what?s wrong with the Switch and other LED bulbs now? Let me explain what I was looking for in the bulbs I tested. First, I wanted a nice ?color??I was looking for a bulb that produced a yellowish light rather than a whitish light. The LED bulbs I tested all aimed to produce a ?color temperature? of 2700 kelvin, which corresponds to a ?soft white? incandescent bulb. (The higher the color temperature, the ?cooler,? or whiter, the light looks.) I was also looking for a bulb that produced a beam that was comparable to that of an incandescent. Placed beneath a lampshade, I wanted the bulb to emit light in all directions (rather than just upward or downward). I also didn?t want the light beam to create sharp patterns on the ceiling or the floor, as a spotlight would?instead, the light should hit objects gently, with a blurry line between light and dark. Finally, I assessed the bulb?s appearance when it was both on and off. I wanted a bulb that would look stylish in a transparent fixture?something you?d be happy to show off rather than hide, as you?d do with a CFL.

My assessment was subjective?I didn?t use a chroma meter to test brightness or color, just my eyes?but I did aim for rigor. I tried a parade of these bulbs in lamps in my bedroom, both one at a time and side-by-side, and I took detailed notes on how they performed. I also enlisted my wife to grade the bulbs on all of these criteria. For good measure, we compared the LEDs to a 60-watt equivalent CFL and a good old 60-watt GE incandescent.

HitLights dimmable 8W LED warm white globe bulb. HitLights dimmable 8W LED Warm White Globe bulb

Courtesy HitLights/Amazon.

My least favorite LED bulbs were the two cheapest ones?the HitLights Warm White Globe, which sells for $18, and the Tuwago A19, which goes for $20. Like all the LED bulbs I tested, these were dimmable and turned on instantly. (This is a big advantage LEDs have over CFLs, many of which take a second to turn on and can?t be dimmed.) Both bulbs are well-designed?with a small plastic dome on top of a gently curved base, the HitLights and Tuwago bulbs both look like ice cream cones. What I didn?t like was the quality of their light. I found both to be slightly too white, as white as the CFL bulb in our mix. My wife agreed?she even preferred the CFL to both these LEDs. (To my eye, the CFL looked a bit harsher, but the difference was slight.)

Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=b284896216d712edfdcc2bc6bfd3d1ed

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