here in mount shasta woo-woo land, there are loads of folks who hate 
fluorescent lighting (never mind that they never notice fixtures with cfl's in 
them). they are all smiley though about leds (go figure).
 
my experience with leds is the lumens/watt is still no greater than a good 
cfl/hid lamp... and that they are very 'dirty' with regard to rfi. try talking 
on your 2 meter ham radio (or watching analog channel 6) with one on and you 
will discover this the hard way. the only advantage i see is instant on, so i 
have replaced my painfully slow to warm-up cfl outdoor flood lights with 
leds... and try to remember the rfi they produce.
 
no doubt eventually leds will be THE lighting source... but imj - not yet.
 
todd
 
 
 
 
 
On Wednesday, December 5, 2012 2:51pm, "Larry Crutcher, Starlight Solar Power 
Systems" <la...@starlightsolar.com> said:


Mick,
I ALWAYS go with AC lighting. The cost/watt of the extra power to operate AC 
lighting is minimal compared the the hassles you have, and will experience 
again, trying to go DC. If the customer needs lighting to be always available, 
go with a small dedicated inverter for the light circuit so you can turn the 
big inverter(s) off until needed.
IMO, LED's are highly over hyped. I see people spend hundreds of $$ putting in 
LED lighting only to be disappointed with quality of light. When I tell them 
the payback is 40 years or so, well I just make folks mad. 








Thank you,

Larry Crutcher
Starlight Solar Power Systems


On Dec 5, 2012, at 2:53 PM, Mick Abraham wrote:
Hi, Knuckle-Busters~

It's lighting retrofit time and also time for me to review "what I thought I 
knew" about various lighting technologies. 

+++++++++++++++++++++++++

Round one of the conversion involves >>well known RV brand<< T8 tubular 
fluorescent fixtures (3' long single tube). These have 24vDC ballasts which (in 
various brands) have failed way too often...and the tubes also are failing too 
soon. 

I've mostly decided to convert the circuits to good ol' American AC instead of 
DC, then I gotta select ballasts (to stay fluor) or convert to LED. Some of the 
List members handle lighting retrofits for better energy efficiency, etc. so I 
need a refresher course.

+++++++++++++++++++++++

For AC ballasts, I'm focusing on the "Programmed Start" type which seem less 
destructive to the tubes when cycled on and off frequently. I could drive three 
tubes with one ballast but then a single bulb failure sends the whole group to 
black since the tubes connect in series. 

Is there a way to test a fluorescent tube using a volt-ohmmeter or other 
non-exotic method? The cost benefit of sharing a ballast among three fixtures 
goes smaller if it's a hassle at lamp replacement time. A failed ballast would 
be tricky to spot with three lamps adding more variables.  

+++++++++++++++++++++++++

I see there are now T8 tubular LED lamps which of course deliver more lumens 
per watt and of course they are still costly. With no ballast to buy, if I 
compared devoting a $25 ballast to each fixture against converting to a $50 LED 
tube, "it's only double the cost" to go LED.

Is LED now ready for prime time? I got on that band wagon too early because the 
"white light" units were moonlight blue, they seemed dimmer than a flashlight, 
color rendition was poor, and worst of all:

 My early LED purchases stopped working properly >>as should not be the case if 
LED is done right.<< Admittedly, my early LED buys were--don't get me 
started--designed for DC and I think the battery voltage fluctuation may play 
havoc with LED and also with the DC fluorescent ballasts. 

Final question: how could I be sure that new LED lights won't "roach out" in a 
few years? My untrained eye has never helped me avoid crummy tech before, so I 
guess it comes down to identifying one (or more) major manufacturer, maybe with 
a long warranty and a good likelihood of staying in business. 

My friends and I must stop buying junk that's going to break--even if it is all 
hyped up about being the "New Latest Environmentally Correct Energy Saver". 
Those >>well known RV brand<< fluorescents are a case in point to say nothing 
of round two: DC driven CFL's!

Thanks & Jolliness,


Mick Abraham, Proprietor
[http://www.abrahamsolar.com/] www.abrahamsolar.com

Voice: 970-731-4675
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