chopped
Veteran Member
I dont want to High Jack the thread but I have a LED question here is my link
Using a LED light on a Well Pump (glowing)
Using a LED light on a Well Pump (glowing)
My 100 year old neighbor called me over last night... she listens to the radio a lot and the reception became awful...
Found the culprit to be a CFL bulb going out in the next room.
Glad I was able to help...
If RFI is an issue don't bother with the uncertified Hong Kong LEDs on Ebay. But by far the worst one I have was from Home Depot and was recommended by Consumer Reports. It trashed reception on the modern flat-panel tv at home - from anywhere in the house. I brought it out here to the ranch where it doesn't bother the 20 year old CRT television but my wife complains it changes brightness whenever it wants.have yet to try my first LED bulb yet, but I have heard some of them have nasty power supply's
If RFI is an issue don't bother with the uncertified Hong Kong LEDs on Ebay. But by far the worst one I have was from Home Depot and was recommended by Consumer Reports. It trashed reception on the modern flat-panel tv at home - from anywhere in the house. I brought it out here to the ranch where it doesn't bother the 20 year old CRT television but my wife complains it changes brightness whenever it wants.
In summary: this seems to still be bleeding-edge technology that hasn't settled down yet, and expensive too.
Do you know if the Cree brand is good quality? I sure don't want one without emission standards, or one with a power supply that will cook in 3 months, and drop 15 to 20 bucks down the drain for a dang light bulb.. If I really though they would last as long as the box says and operate cleanly, they would be a good investment. I just don't want to take any risks..![]()
Do you know if the Cree brand is good quality? I sure don't want one without emission standards, or one with a power supply that will cook in 3 months, and drop 15 to 20 bucks down the drain for a dang light bulb.. If I really though they would last as long as the box says and operate cleanly, they would be a good investment. I just don't want to take any risks..![]()
My local utility distributes CFLs at cost because pushing energy conservation to free up capacity is far cheaper than constructing new generating plants. Seems to me a rational business decision.
.
You have grid system peak demand but the poster said something about generation. Peak demand on grid and generation facilities aren't the same thing. BTW incandescent bulb peak usage, is at peak demand for both grid and generation systems.Incandescent bulb peak usage is at different daily timing of grid system peak demand.
They have nothing to do with capacity that require building new plants.
Ever heard of hydroelectric generation? It can be operated very demand-sensitive unlike a coal plant.Incandescent bulb peak usage is at different daily timing of grid system peak demand.
They have nothing to do with capacity that require building new plants.
You have grid system peak demand but the poster said something about generation. Peak demand on grid and generation facilities aren't the same thing. BTW incandescent bulb peak usage, is at peak demand for both grid and generation systems.
I don't need numbers, it stands to reason, when i put more load on the system, they open the gates up to compensate. When i use less power, they turn the gates down so less water goes thru the system. Unless they are selling it someplace else. See, that make sense doesn't it?No.
Get some of your incandescent usage TOD vs grid system peak #'s, and we'll talk. Doesn't work like that where I live.
Also, where I live, new plants are built when others are shutdown, or system demand exceeds capacity. That happens during the day here-not night, almost always during hot summer and long days when lighting is at minimum- not at night when incandescents are on in peoples homes.