Friday, October 30, 2009

Update - LED lighting

The up front cost of LED replacement equivalent lamps can be somewhat daunting to the uninitiated.  
  One must and probably will do the math before their first replacement of conventional incandescent lamps and compact fluorescent models with LED lighting. Before dismissal out of hand one should be aware of three key technical factoids which MUST be factored into the buying formula (these are not the ONLY factors, but still these three items MUST be remembered and referenced to when buying replacement LED bulbs).
  1. Lumens not watts are the primary quality of lamp lighting. Lumens are the measured amount of light a lamp emits (in the visible-to-the-eye spectrum of light). One does not replace a 100 watt incandescent light with an equivalent LED light so much as one replaces a 100 watt, 920 Lumen incandescent lamp taking 10 hours to burn 1 kilowatt hour of energy with a 6.4 watt, 900 Lumen LED lamp taking 156 hours to burn 1 kilowatt hour of energy to see by, and so forth. The "color temperature" of the Lumens is also important with "Cool White" and "Warm White" the most common buzz terms to consider depending on where and for what need they are to be used...
  2. Watts are burned to make the light one needs for an application for both indoor and outdoor lighting. The reduced LED wattage has a double importance for indoor lighting in that during summer operation one's cooling system does not have to remove near as much waste heat (average .075th of the heat) from LED lights as compared to equivalent incandescent lighting. (Remember from your high school science, that Watts are a measure of heat energy, originally for steam engines and later for electrical generators.). Practically speaking, all lighting energy converts back into heat energy.
  Both indoor and outdoor LED lighting applications reduce the amount of non-renewable, greenhouse emissions of one's electrical utility as well; and that will take pressure off of installation of ever more transmission lines to carry ever greater demand for that irreplaceable-never-going-away-electrical-product. In many applications it is actually cost effective to install solar panels on security night light standard poles populated by low battery power consumpting LED's that would otherwise have to have transmission lines run to them in new public locations. Large back yards could benefit from solar powered LED motion activated security lighting; breaking even when one does not have to run building code safe wiring to a new security light system. The criminal sport of stripping copper wiring from municipal light standard poles would be circumvented, as well.
  3. LED lighting averages 50,000 hours MLBF "Mean Life Before Failure" which is significantly less than the 8,000 MLBF to replace compact fluorescent lamps (requiring special handling to dispose of these mercury rich appliances) and 1,200 MLBF for the average incandescent lamp. Most municipalities and large business operations have full time paid staff that do nothing but replace lighting during their 8-5 week long shifts with overtime if they get behind. Factor these considerations in when contemplating the "high cost" of replacement of home or business or municipal lighting with ultra-long-life LED lighting, as well.
  It has been four plus years and a substantial reduction in our utility bill later since retrofitting to compact fluorescent lighting. We think it is time to step up and replace CFL's and incandescent lighting as they burn out with LED's for even more savings. The average return on investment is less than three years with the next 12 to 15 years MLBF that follow being all gravey. jwr
.
Other LED Links
End.

HANDY SWITCH RECALL PRODUCT RECALL NOTICE

For those of y'all that use the wireless Handy Switch or know of
someone who may have one or more of them; this is a recall
you can take advantage of because it is a manufacturer based
recall... I bought my first Handy Switch through Idea Village
a number of years ago and have a night lamp plugged into it
that we use when getting up during the wee hours which can
be turned on while we pad around in our otherwise dark house,
then turned back off once we stumble into bed-die bye,
afterwords. Later I found it on sale at Fry's Electronics and got
one for our kitchen cabinet under shelf add-on fluorescent
lighting instead of fumbling for thumb switches, toggle wheels 
and buttons to push; all left in the ON position and powered
through one wireless switch located at the most used work
station of our kitchen counter. All the extension wiring is neatly
tie-wrapped.
.
When I called the recall toll free number and talked to a nice
Asian accented lady. I found that my admission that I only
bought ONE Handy Switch from Idea Village she smoothly
said that they would send TWO prepaid mailers for BOTH
Handy Switches... This was a Manufacturer's recall. Read the
recall email message below to get the link or toll free number
for your own cycle of action. Don't ignore it, please. jwr
.
P.S., As a retired tradesman I can explain that the switch, while
low to nil power consuming while in the Off mode, DOES have
a potential to overheat due to a phenomenon known as and
related to how it works while idle. "Hysteresis Loss" is the
phenomenon; when in an idle mode. That is the phenomenon
that power coils and transformers have in which a trickle of
electricity leaks through a circuit and is designed into them
such that the leakage creates a counter-effect which impedes
or chokes off any more energy from leaking through the coil
or transformer. Very fine wire devices may break or short out
over the age of a device - when that happens they allow more
energy to "Leak Through" it. Eventually they burn out more and
more fine wires and eventually burn out in a burst of short
circuited energy when too much heat builds up in themselves
to choke off the power. Modern devices use electronic circuits
to choke the idle-but-not-off use of energy, now. They don't
waste Hysteresis Energy at all. End. See In-line attached below.

----- Forwarded Message ----
From: Handy Switch Customer Service <handyswitch.cs@fulfillment.com>
To: JOSEPH W RICHARDSON <GREEN.METROPLEX@YAHOO.COM>
Sent: Wed, October 21, 2009 4:33:26 PM
Subject: HANDY SWITCH RECALL PRODUCT RECALL NOTICE

RE:    IMPORTANT RECALL NOTICE

October 21, 2009

Dear Valued Customer,

Our records indicate that you purchased a Handy Switch Wireless Remote Light Switch from IdeaVillage. We strive to ensure that each product we deliver is the best quality and provides the best possible customer experience.

It has come to our attention that the receiver (the component that fits into the wall outlet with a built-in night light) can overheat, posing a fire hazard to consumers. The company has received 14 reports of overheating, including 9 reports of fire, 5 of which resulted in property damage. No injuries have been reported.. You should unplug and stop using your receiver and register for a free remedy.

In cooperation with the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission, IdeaVillage is voluntarily providing consumers with the choice of one of two free remedies: (1) a snap-on protective cap cover to place over the receiver to securely contain any possible fire due to overheating or (2) a wireless remote light switch replacement product.

If you prefer a snap-on protective cap cover, we will send you a protective cap to simply place over the receiver, along with easy installation instructions. Note this cover will not prevent overheating from occurring, but rather will contain any resulting fire. If you prefer a wireless remote light switch replacement product, we will send you a postage pre-paid mailer in which to place your Handy Switch receiver (the component that plugs into the wall) to send it back to us. Upon receipt of your receiver, we will send a replacement product, the Super Switch, free of charge.

For more information on the recall program and registration for your free remedy, please visit our website at: www.handyswitchrecall.com or call IdeaVillage toll-free at: (888) 655-4339 between 5:00 am and 6:00 pm (Pacific) Monday through Friday. You can also contact customer service by email at handyswitch.cs@fulfillment.com.

We appreciate your patience.

Sincerely,

David Epstein
Vice President

Zero E House in Lewisville Texas

Dateline Friday, 30 October 2009
 
Hey there Guy,

 

Here's a first hat-pass as we search for a less censorious domain

and email provider than Yahoo! for the green-metroplex caucus
to be parked on.

.

The Dallas Morning News Metro section covered by writer

Wendy Hundley whundley@dallasnews.com of this eco-friendly

home, soon to be lived in by Amanda Ferguson's and her
Husband Scott
Owens after tearing down the old family frame

house that she grew up in. The project has become a poster

child for Green Craft Builders, LLC et all, who specialize in the
construction
of Zero-E homes and offices in the DFW Metroplex.  

.
If you link to nothing else on their domain website, go to the
video links and turn up the volume on your speakers when you
peruse their assorted construction of assorted eco-friendly items.
That page alone is worth the half hour or so it'll take to view
the videos of the construction and knowledge base available
concerning the Timber Creek Energy Zero House built right here
in the DFW Metroplex: http://timbercreekzeroenergyhouse.com/videos.html
Keep a notepad handy for the first rate links to sustainable construction
products and other useful earth friendly goods. I personally book
marked them and also highlighted, copied and pasted their URL's
into an info manager,
just to be sure the links were not typo'd.
There is a tour of the house during the next four Fri - Sat's.
.
Here is the home page link, also: http://timbercreekzeroenergyhouse.com/
  From the desktop of Warren Richardson winking  pro-active advocate
  for conversion to energy alternatives and carbon footprint reduction.
  Moderator of 
http://dfw-alt-e-caucus.blogspot.com/ Web Blog and the
  Webmaster of http://www.green-metroplex.com/ ... You are invited 
  to come see how cost effective, and sometimes profitable it can be 
to
                                         go green! save big