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Long Life GU10 bulbs
7 Answers
I have been advised to replace my kitchen light bulbs (GU10's) with more expensive long life bulbs which are supposed to last 20 years. What worries me is that the ones I have seen in Homebase are only 1W, whereas the ones I am using now are 25W (I have a fitting that takes 4 of them).
Am I right in thinking that the long life ones are going to be too dim?
Am I right in thinking that the long life ones are going to be too dim?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by denis567. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.You probably require a 3W bulb.
3W GU10 low energy bulbs emit as much light energy as a conventional 35W GU10 bulb. At first glance that figure might seem a bit high for your needs but, because the spectral qualities of the light from low energy bulbs are different from those of conventional bulbs, many people seem to find that low energy bulbs don't actually appear as bright as their 'equivalent wattage' suggests.
However Philips 'Econic' range (which they quote as lasting 15 years, based on 1000 hours use per year) don't come cheap:
http://www.johnlewis....uct.aspx?source=14798
(That's a 'bargain', by the way. They're £5 dearer on the official Philips website!)
Philips also produce a far cheaper range of low energy bulbs, where a 7W bulb is nominally rated as equivalent to 25W but they're only expected to last for 8 years (based upon 1000 hours use per year):
http://www.johnlewis....30439663/Product.aspx
Chris
3W GU10 low energy bulbs emit as much light energy as a conventional 35W GU10 bulb. At first glance that figure might seem a bit high for your needs but, because the spectral qualities of the light from low energy bulbs are different from those of conventional bulbs, many people seem to find that low energy bulbs don't actually appear as bright as their 'equivalent wattage' suggests.
However Philips 'Econic' range (which they quote as lasting 15 years, based on 1000 hours use per year) don't come cheap:
http://www.johnlewis....uct.aspx?source=14798
(That's a 'bargain', by the way. They're £5 dearer on the official Philips website!)
Philips also produce a far cheaper range of low energy bulbs, where a 7W bulb is nominally rated as equivalent to 25W but they're only expected to last for 8 years (based upon 1000 hours use per year):
http://www.johnlewis....30439663/Product.aspx
Chris
I'm not sure that I can give a very accurate answer about how bright the 1W bulbs would be. From the Philips website it seems that they're a completely different type of bulb to conventional low energy bulbs, and consequently no 'equivalent wattage' figure is quoted. However the customer reviews on the Homebase website aren't particularly complimentary about them:
http://www.homebase.c...ail=searchtext%3EGU10
Chris
http://www.homebase.c...ail=searchtext%3EGU10
Chris
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