Business & Finance1 min ago
All thanks to the EU
24 Answers
http://www.dailymail....rs-174-cent-year.html
The EU legislation in 2009 made it illegal to make pearl bulbs in the UK or import them from abroad, although the clear bulbs are not banned because energy saving bulbs fail to reproduce the dazzling light they emit.
/// But under a voluntary agreement which came into effect this month, chains including Sainsbury’s, Tesco, B&Q and Asda have agreed to stop selling traditional bulbs altogether. ///
Do you miss the bright light of the old style bulb, or do you think the small amount of energy saving and the increase cost of the new type bulb, is well worth the sacrifice?
The EU legislation in 2009 made it illegal to make pearl bulbs in the UK or import them from abroad, although the clear bulbs are not banned because energy saving bulbs fail to reproduce the dazzling light they emit.
/// But under a voluntary agreement which came into effect this month, chains including Sainsbury’s, Tesco, B&Q and Asda have agreed to stop selling traditional bulbs altogether. ///
Do you miss the bright light of the old style bulb, or do you think the small amount of energy saving and the increase cost of the new type bulb, is well worth the sacrifice?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Another blatant rip off courtesy of ridiculous EU legislation forced upon us by unelected self serving bureaucrats. These bulbs were initially given away for free to every household in a hugely expensive promotion, then conventional bulbs were outlawed. Since then the cost of these 'superior' bulbs has risen by up to 174% in the last year.
http://www.dailymail....ars-174-cent-year.htm
http://www.dailymail....ars-174-cent-year.htm
I've never actually paid for an energy saving bulb, I'm still using the free ones from about 6 years ago
But they typically cost £3, so if a "normal" bulb cost £0.60....
Energy saving bulbs have a life span of about 10000 hours, "normal" bulbs about 1000 hours....
3/10000 = 0.0003 pence per hour for energy saving bulbs
0.60/1000=0.0006 pence per hour for "normal" bulbs
I'll keep doing the maths if you want
But they typically cost £3, so if a "normal" bulb cost £0.60....
Energy saving bulbs have a life span of about 10000 hours, "normal" bulbs about 1000 hours....
3/10000 = 0.0003 pence per hour for energy saving bulbs
0.60/1000=0.0006 pence per hour for "normal" bulbs
I'll keep doing the maths if you want
/// Yes, the EU are conning you into saving money in both the long term costs of buying bulbs and running them, how dare they. ///
Yes how dare they for not giving us the choice of using the old bulb at their original low cost, their immediate full illumination, and a light that is much brighter than the candle glow we get from the new ones, how dare they.
Yes how dare they for not giving us the choice of using the old bulb at their original low cost, their immediate full illumination, and a light that is much brighter than the candle glow we get from the new ones, how dare they.
This subject has been discussed many times. IMO it is a perfect example of how those in power impose on the rest against their will for no justification. You don't get anything like 80% energy saving. That would imply all power to a candescent bulb that was not converted to light, was wasted. which is obviously not so. What heat you don't supply from the bulb you have to supply from your boiler. I have concluded this can only be an ego boost exercise for those who can impose their will. I've yet to find a better explanation.
So sticking with a 40watt bulb then...
Old style bulbs are typically 10% efficient in light output, 90% of power used is "wasted" as heat.
So if you are using a bulb for one hour you are putting 30watts of heat into the room as heat at a typical cost of 13pence per KH/h in electricity which will cost you 0.39pence.
Gas costs approximately 4pence per KW/h so that 30watts of heat for an hour would cost you .12pence in gas.
So your supposed saving in gas for the negligible amount of heat would be 0.12pence but it's going to cost you 0.39pence in electricity to save that gas.
I spot a flaw in your statement.
Old style bulbs are typically 10% efficient in light output, 90% of power used is "wasted" as heat.
So if you are using a bulb for one hour you are putting 30watts of heat into the room as heat at a typical cost of 13pence per KH/h in electricity which will cost you 0.39pence.
Gas costs approximately 4pence per KW/h so that 30watts of heat for an hour would cost you .12pence in gas.
So your supposed saving in gas for the negligible amount of heat would be 0.12pence but it's going to cost you 0.39pence in electricity to save that gas.
I spot a flaw in your statement.