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Ripped Off With Energy Saving Bulbs.

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anotheoldgit | 10:04 Fri 24th Jul 2015 | ChatterBank
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I recently had one of the old type 40w round opaque bulb blow in one of my chandeliers.

I was then in for quite a shock when trying to buy a replacement at my local DIY shop there was a whole aisle set aside for light bulbs all completely alien to me in styles, small threaded, large threaded, bayonet halogen, LED, Energy-Saving etc.

But could I find the once cheap standard round bulb? no, the nearest I could get was a round, clear halogen bulb 42w (traditional 55w) 630 Lumens????????????

And they don't come cheap £5 each, and of course that made all the rest of the bulbs in the chandelier obsolete, so I had to replace all of them, wow how we are being ripped off once again.


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Bear in mind the average life of energy saving bulbs is about 12 years.
Anything to do with energy saving/environmentally friendly/carbon footprint etc is a rip off and I try to avoid any product that makes any of these claims.
Changing just one lamp will look very strange. I would look for an electrical wholesalers or lighting shop and take in the lamp you're trying to replace. They're usually very helpful and often cheaper than big retail stores.
Think you could have bought one of the old type bulbs at a cheepo shop like Poundstretcher but as Danny has said, the new types are cheaper in the long run.
If you've got a domestic supplies place near you have a look around it as most of them stock the "old"type of bulb it's just that they have to be labeled as something else now such as "Industrial" or "heavy Duty"
Somehow I doubt this average life quote. Or else I've been unlucky. Maybe it's a interpolated figure from laboratory conditions.

Any old style incandescent bulbs one finds these days are very low quality versions that blow with a vengeance after a short while. Not a patch on the quality versions one used to get.

The whole thing was a con. Although I suspect it had more to do with politicians egos and need to look if not actually be "green" than any commercial gain.

Is LED a possibility for you ? I'm guessing they may have better longevity.
//Somehow I doubt this average life quote//
I have several bulbs that have already lasted more than 12years.
I am tempting fate here, but we have incandescent low energy chandelier bulbs and have scarcely replaced one since we got them
The downside is we are lulled into a false sense of security: we rarely think to have any replacements in stock as having one go is such a rarity
Maybe I've just been lucky OG but when I moved back into my house after having rented it out for a year I put energy saving bulbs in every light socket and they're still going strong. That was in 2003 so I reckon that's good value. On the other hand I have very small energy saving bulbs in my electric fire which seem to need replaced twice a year. Can't win every one.
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tonyav

I think they must be the same, only a little cheaper at £4.59 a bulb.
you can get then on line no probs
http://www.thelightbulb.co.uk/product/General-Purpose-Lamps-Bulbs/Incandescent-GLS/c-2 .
40watt - 99p, i get 150 watt for some areas
I find they are NOT longer lasting either. One set of wall lights have downward facing candle bulbs. They blow regularly. I was told that is because they should only face upwards. grrrrrr. I am expected to buy new wall lights to satisfy some conning European directive.
The marketplace is currently subject to a lot of cheap Chinese imports.
The new bulb will use less than half the electricty of the old one and should last longer. So over the lifetime of the bulb you will save more than a £fivers worth of electricity.

If you half your electricity consumption for lighting, that means less electricity has to be generated, so less carbon emissions.
i should have said if you 8 of theses bulbs for instance with postage they work out at around £2 each still a lot cheaper and ive had no problems with life expectancy of around 2000 hrs at all.
I don't mind helping to lower emissions but I do mind not being able to read etc.

I have had to spend more on buying lamps to dot around the room when my pendant ceiling lights with 150 watt bulbs did the trick.
gromit, not always so i have 3 in a light fitting 28 watt halogen and they blow after around 700 hrs, bought from BHS
My corner shop has the traditional bulbs in 40, 60 , 100 and 200 watt sizes , 59p to £1,25 each. They have loads of them.
£5 each? I'd be incandescent with rage!

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