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Green Capitalism

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  • L Lost User

    I like flourescent bulbs because they run cold. We have some quite nice delicate paper lamp shades and filament bulbs tend to burn them. Also, the way filament bulbs are so sensitive to knocks is a pain in the but.

    Truth is the subjection of reality to an individuals perception

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    Red Stateler
    wrote on last edited by
    #16

    My favorite feature is that they take several seconds to reach full-brightness. So when I get up in the morning and turn on the bathroom light, my eyes adjust more readily. The incandescents blasted me with pure evil.


    Anybody rape your wife yet? -IAmChrisMcCall

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    • R Red Stateler

      My favorite feature is that they take several seconds to reach full-brightness. So when I get up in the morning and turn on the bathroom light, my eyes adjust more readily. The incandescents blasted me with pure evil.


      Anybody rape your wife yet? -IAmChrisMcCall

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      Lost User
      wrote on last edited by
      #17

      Kind of like soft start on a 100 W amp. Never thought of it but its true, it doesnt melt your retinas quite so effectively as a normal bulb.

      Truth is the subjection of reality to an individuals perception

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      • P Patrick Etc

        Red Stateler wrote:

        I was referring to the newer white LEDs which, from what I've seen, appear to me to have a bit of a bluish tint.

        Hmmmm I just looked at Ryan Roberts' link to the white LED spectrum. I didn't know they were doing that. His link also explains the bluish tint. The Wikipedia article on LEDs mentions that there are methods to produce warmer light from LEDs. Wonder how long it will take to see those in homes.


        The early bird who catches the worm works for someone who comes in late and owns the worm farm. -- Travis McGee

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        Red Stateler
        wrote on last edited by
        #18

        It was a breakthrough made something like (I think) 5 years ago. LED flashlights are more and more common (go to Sharper Image and you're guaranteed to see them), but light bulbs for the home are still a rarity.


        Anybody rape your wife yet? -IAmChrisMcCall

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        • R Red Stateler

          My favorite feature is that they take several seconds to reach full-brightness. So when I get up in the morning and turn on the bathroom light, my eyes adjust more readily. The incandescents blasted me with pure evil.


          Anybody rape your wife yet? -IAmChrisMcCall

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          Dan Neely
          wrote on last edited by
          #19

          There's a fair amount of spread in warm up rates. I installed my CFLs over the course of a year as the incandescents burned out and have at least 3 brands in use. Some of which are essentially instant on and others which warm up rather slowly.

          -- If you view money as inherently evil, I view it as my duty to assist in making you more virtuous.

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          • R Ryan Roberts

            Its an unbelievably retarded idea. Fluorescents will only work within certain temperature ranges and are only more efficient if left on for significant periods. They are also a total swine to dispose of under the raft of mercury control legislation recently passed by the.. EU.

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            Dan Neely
            wrote on last edited by
            #20

            Ryan Roberts wrote:

            They are also a total swine to dispose of under the raft of mercury control legislation recently passed by the.. EU.

            At the same time though unless you're using green energy, even if you're bad and toss them into the trash, you're still releasing less mercury into the environment than you would by burning additional coal to run incandescents instead.

            -- If you view money as inherently evil, I view it as my duty to assist in making you more virtuous.

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            • R Red Stateler

              link[^]

              General Electric Co., founded by incandescent bulb developer Thomas Edison, said
              Thursday that it planned to cut about 1,400 jobs in its lighting division as the
              company closes plants in the United States and Brazil amid a consumer shift to more
              energy-efficient fluorescent lamps.
              ...
              Sales of traditional bulbs are slowing by at least 10% a year, said James Campbell,
              head of GE's consumer and industrial unit. The rate of decline will accelerate, while
              revenue from technology such as compact fluorescent lighting is up by a "very strong
              double-digit" percentage, he said. Congress is considering legislation that may do away
              with incandescent lights.

              Rising energy prices make energy efficiency financially efficient. Without the government mandates seen in Australia (or proposed, but I don't know if it passed, in California), the market is strongly favoring efficiency to combat rising prices. I switched to compact flourescents nearly a year ago because they are simply a better and more efficient technology. For those who buy into the global warming nonsense, this is proof positive of the free market's ability to combat that mythical beast without the need for government intervention.


              Anybody rape your wife yet? -IAmChrisMcCall

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              CataclysmicQuantum
              wrote on last edited by
              #21

              Red Stateler wrote:

              Anybody rape your wife yet?

              Whats up with that? Thats a terrible signature.

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              • C CataclysmicQuantum

                Red Stateler wrote:

                Anybody rape your wife yet?

                Whats up with that? Thats a terrible signature.

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                Red Stateler
                wrote on last edited by
                #22

                CataclysmicQuantums wrote:

                Whats up with that? Thats a terrible signature.

                I was recently robbed and IAmChrisMcCall went on about how wonderful it was and insinuated that my wife being raped would have been a good thing (she was fortunately not home). I added his quote to my signature to preserve evidence of his absolute classlessness.


                Anybody rape your wife yet? -IAmChrisMcCall

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                • R Ryan Roberts

                  Its an unbelievably retarded idea. Fluorescents will only work within certain temperature ranges and are only more efficient if left on for significant periods. They are also a total swine to dispose of under the raft of mercury control legislation recently passed by the.. EU.

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                  CataclysmicQuantum
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #23

                  Ryan Roberts wrote:

                  They are also a total swine to dispose of under the raft of mercury control legislation recently passed by the.. EU.

                  Isn't mercury a natural substance extracted from the earth in the first place? I don't see what the big deal is. I have a bottle of it and I like to play with it, I don't touch the stuff because I don't want it in my blood stream, but still.

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                  • R Red Stateler

                    CataclysmicQuantums wrote:

                    Whats up with that? Thats a terrible signature.

                    I was recently robbed and IAmChrisMcCall went on about how wonderful it was and insinuated that my wife being raped would have been a good thing (she was fortunately not home). I added his quote to my signature to preserve evidence of his absolute classlessness.


                    Anybody rape your wife yet? -IAmChrisMcCall

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                    CataclysmicQuantum
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #24

                    Red Stateler wrote:

                    wonderful it was and insinuated that my wife being raped would have been a good thing

                    Thats absolutely terrible. If someone said something like that to me in person I would break his jaw.

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                    • C CataclysmicQuantum

                      Ryan Roberts wrote:

                      They are also a total swine to dispose of under the raft of mercury control legislation recently passed by the.. EU.

                      Isn't mercury a natural substance extracted from the earth in the first place? I don't see what the big deal is. I have a bottle of it and I like to play with it, I don't touch the stuff because I don't want it in my blood stream, but still.

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                      Dan Neely
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #25

                      mercury in rock is contained and isn't going anywhere. Mercury dumped into the trash will eventually leak out of the landfill or become air pollution at the incinerator. In either case it goes from being contained and harmless to into the environment and causing problems.

                      -- If you view money as inherently evil, I view it as my duty to assist in making you more virtuous.

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                      • D Dan Neely

                        mercury in rock is contained and isn't going anywhere. Mercury dumped into the trash will eventually leak out of the landfill or become air pollution at the incinerator. In either case it goes from being contained and harmless to into the environment and causing problems.

                        -- If you view money as inherently evil, I view it as my duty to assist in making you more virtuous.

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                        led mike
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #26

                        dan neely wrote:

                        In either case it goes from being contained and harmless to into the environment and causing problems.

                        So do people, what's your point? ;P

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                        • R Red Stateler

                          Well all bulbs differ from the sun. Incandescents[^] heavily favor yellow. I'd just like to see some LEDs bulbs in home use to see what they look like. I'm guessing that since nobody is widely producing them that they might not look all that great.


                          Anybody rape your wife yet? -IAmChrisMcCall

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                          Jim Warburton
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #27

                          LEDs for the home can be found by looking hard enough. I wouldn't recommend it currently, one of the big problems is you can't replace a single bulb, the whole must be replaced (think of a chandelier, if one bulb goes out you must buy a new chandelier, not just replace the burned out bulb). One bulb is pocket change but the whole fixture is upwards of $40.

                          this thing looks like it was written by an epileptic ferret Dave Kreskowiak

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                          • J Jim Warburton

                            LEDs for the home can be found by looking hard enough. I wouldn't recommend it currently, one of the big problems is you can't replace a single bulb, the whole must be replaced (think of a chandelier, if one bulb goes out you must buy a new chandelier, not just replace the burned out bulb). One bulb is pocket change but the whole fixture is upwards of $40.

                            this thing looks like it was written by an epileptic ferret Dave Kreskowiak

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                            Dan Neely
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #28

                            Have you seen any that are suitable for general purpose use? I've looked in the past but the only consumer one I've seen was IIRC a 25W equivalent, and the amazon comments were that it was too directional for general purpose usage but made a decent work table spot.

                            -- If you view money as inherently evil, I view it as my duty to assist in making you more virtuous.

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                            • J Jim Warburton

                              LEDs for the home can be found by looking hard enough. I wouldn't recommend it currently, one of the big problems is you can't replace a single bulb, the whole must be replaced (think of a chandelier, if one bulb goes out you must buy a new chandelier, not just replace the burned out bulb). One bulb is pocket change but the whole fixture is upwards of $40.

                              this thing looks like it was written by an epileptic ferret Dave Kreskowiak

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                              Red Stateler
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #29

                              jimwawar wrote:

                              LEDs for the home can be found by looking hard enough. I wouldn't recommend it currently, one of the big problems is you can't replace a single bulb, the whole must be replaced (think of a chandelier, if one bulb goes out you must buy a new chandelier, not just replace the burned out bulb). One bulb is pocket change but the whole fixture is upwards of $40.

                              You mean the whole fixture that constitutes a bulb equivalent to one incandescent? When I looked at them online, that's about the price range I saw, making it financially insensible.


                              Anybody rape your wife yet? -IAmChrisMcCall

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                              • D Dan Neely

                                Have you seen any that are suitable for general purpose use? I've looked in the past but the only consumer one I've seen was IIRC a 25W equivalent, and the amazon comments were that it was too directional for general purpose usage but made a decent work table spot.

                                -- If you view money as inherently evil, I view it as my duty to assist in making you more virtuous.

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                                Jim Warburton
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #30

                                The one I was able to root up here (one store in population base of 350,000) were if I recall 60W. They produced a reasonable range of illumination (not spot, but not as general as an incandescent) Don't recall the manufacturer.

                                this thing looks like it was written by an epileptic ferret Dave Kreskowiak

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                                • R Red Stateler

                                  jimwawar wrote:

                                  LEDs for the home can be found by looking hard enough. I wouldn't recommend it currently, one of the big problems is you can't replace a single bulb, the whole must be replaced (think of a chandelier, if one bulb goes out you must buy a new chandelier, not just replace the burned out bulb). One bulb is pocket change but the whole fixture is upwards of $40.

                                  You mean the whole fixture that constitutes a bulb equivalent to one incandescent? When I looked at them online, that's about the price range I saw, making it financially insensible.


                                  Anybody rape your wife yet? -IAmChrisMcCall

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                                  Jim Warburton
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #31

                                  One LED fixture to replace one incandescent bulb contains many LED bulbs. As the bulbs die the light becomes less until a new fixture is purchased.

                                  this thing looks like it was written by an epileptic ferret Dave Kreskowiak

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                                  • L led mike

                                    dan neely wrote:

                                    In either case it goes from being contained and harmless to into the environment and causing problems.

                                    So do people, what's your point? ;P

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                                    cp9876
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #32

                                    I think the problem with mercury and other heavy metals is that they tend to accumulate in animals and so move up the foodchain. Tied up in compounds in the earth is fine, but we tend to process them into forms that can be absorbed into living cells. I'm not sure of the exact process (e.g. whether it involves plants), but essentially we release it into the environment, small creatures absorb it, they get eaten by larger creatures and it passes up the foodchain very efficiently. This is why I make a rule of not regularly eating large fish (e.g. swordfish) as they sit high up the food chain and tend to have higher levels of heavy metals. A quick google threw this up http://www.lenntech.com/heavy-metals.htm[^]


                                    Peter "Until the invention of the computer, the machine gun was the device that enabled humans to make the most mistakes in the smallest amount of time."

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                                    • R Red Stateler

                                      CataclysmicQuantums wrote:

                                      Whats up with that? Thats a terrible signature.

                                      I was recently robbed and IAmChrisMcCall went on about how wonderful it was and insinuated that my wife being raped would have been a good thing (she was fortunately not home). I added his quote to my signature to preserve evidence of his absolute classlessness.


                                      Anybody rape your wife yet? -IAmChrisMcCall

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                                      IamChrisMcCall
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #33

                                      I never did anything of the sort. I made fun of him for being robbed. He was the one who brought up his wife's rape in order to get attention on the internet. Isn't that right, Eric?

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                                      • C CataclysmicQuantum

                                        Red Stateler wrote:

                                        wonderful it was and insinuated that my wife being raped would have been a good thing

                                        Thats absolutely terrible. If someone said something like that to me in person I would break his jaw.

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                                        IamChrisMcCall
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #34

                                        CataclysmicQuantums wrote:

                                        If someone said something like that to me in person I would break his jaw.

                                        Oh, OK internet tough guy. You and Eric make a cute couple.

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                                        • I IamChrisMcCall

                                          I never did anything of the sort. I made fun of him for being robbed. He was the one who brought up his wife's rape in order to get attention on the internet. Isn't that right, Eric?

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                                          Red Stateler
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #35

                                          IamChrisMcCall wrote:

                                          I never did anything of the sort. I made fun of him for being robbed. He was the one who brought up his wife's rape in order to get attention on the internet. Isn't that right, Eric?

                                          I brought the fact that she could have very well been raped had she been home (another woman was killed the next day not too far from me in a similar incident) and you thought it was a great idea. You then followed up later with what I quoted you in order to continue the harassment. Why? Simply because you are a classless degenerate. *spit*


                                          Anybody rape your wife yet? -IAmChrisMcCall

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