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Buying Light Bulbs
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Does anyone know where I can still buy 100w and 60w BC tungsten filament lightbulbs in opal or clear? I can't stand these new fangled energy-saving bulbs and want a bulb that comes on as soon as a press the switch. I know poundshops used to sell them around the time that the EU made their sale difficult but I don't know who stocks them nowadays. I just want some bog-standard bulbs that will do the job and not cost a packet.
Thank you.
Thank you.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Corner shops and bargain stores still sell them. However, I would counsel caution. They are cheap makes and don't last five minutes. I used to use them but if I got three weeks out of a bulb I was lucky. Mine would pop out of the socket and onto the floor, often not cleanly. Three times I have had to get an electrician to repair the fitting so I have given them up as a bad job.
Yes you can still find them around if you look away from the big sellers. I'm with you, the new bulbs are not so bright whatever anyone says and they are so complicated. I had to ask an assistant which bulb to buy in B&Q to go with a new lamp I was buying from there and even he didn't understand them.
I'm don't understand this. I thought the EU banned the sale of incandescent light bulbs a few years ago. How come they are still on sale? I seem to recall something about more robust, industrial-type BC bulbs being exempt from the ban, but the bulbs are still around all the same.
I've seen some that are more expensive than than I'd like to pay that have some sort of intricate assembly holding the complexly wound filament in place. What are these about? Surely they can't be halogen as they look identical in size and shape to an ordinary bulb.
I've seen some that are more expensive than than I'd like to pay that have some sort of intricate assembly holding the complexly wound filament in place. What are these about? Surely they can't be halogen as they look identical in size and shape to an ordinary bulb.
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