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  1.     
    #1
    Senior Member

    Incandescents staging a comeback

    Because of their poor efficency, incandescents have been essentially legislated out of existence in the USA.

    Rather than losing much of their business, the lighting company's engineers have gone back to the drawing board.

    Available now are bulbs that are 30% more effecient than last years. Next year they should be up 100% and within a few years they are slated to be on a par with CFLs or about 4 times more lumen output from the same wattage.

    Now, despite a common misconception, incandescents have a great spectrum for plant growing, it is just that too much energy is wasted as heat and the life expectancy of a bulb is quite short. I currently use a low wattage incandescent in flowering as the light is rich in deep red, far red and infrared -areas most other grow lights are lacking in. (I recommend about 10% total wattage in incandescent - try it!)

    If the engineers deliver on these promises we may have a new source of great supplemental lighting. And of course, the CFL manufacturers will not stand idly by and will be forced to make their lights more efficient. A win-win!
    RackitMan Reviewed by RackitMan on . Incandescents staging a comeback Because of their poor efficency, incandescents have been essentially legislated out of existence in the USA. Rather than losing much of their business, the lighting company's engineers have gone back to the drawing board. Available now are bulbs that are 30% more effecient than last years. Next year they should be up 100% and within a few years they are slated to be on a par with CFLs or about 4 times more lumen output from the same wattage. Now, despite a common misconception, Rating: 5

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  3.     
    #2
    Senior Member

    Incandescents staging a comeback

    The only problem that I have with CFLs, is folks throwing them out and ending up in landfills. They have mecury in them.... heavy metals leach into the ground and the ground water, as well as rivers and lakes. That is not a good thing, and will do a lot of serious damage to the environment.

    The government is real good with comming up with all kinds of stuff like that, without considering the consequences. Where are the recycling centers for CFLs and flouros?? There are none around here.... There *might* be one in New Orleans, or Mobile..... but nowhere within a 220 mile round trip.

  4.     
    #3
    Senior Member

    Incandescents staging a comeback

    Quote Originally Posted by RackitMan
    Now, despite a common misconception, incandescents have a great spectrum for plant growing, it is just that too much energy is wasted as heat and the life expectancy of a bulb is quite short. I currently use a low wattage incandescent in flowering as the light is rich in deep red, far red and infrared -areas most other grow lights are lacking in. (I recommend about 10% total wattage in incandescent - try it!)
    First off what exactly can you prove that incandescents do for you in flowering? I understand that you "recommend" 10% of the wattage be incandescent, but WHY is the important detail that you left out.

    Unless you don't know and you just think it helps you so you want to tell others to do it to, in which case I'll just ignore this thread, apologize for stopping in, and be on my way.

    Please provide justification in the future for your suggestions. Nothing worse than another post telling growers to do something unconventional with no evidence of why to do it. Maybe I'm the only one that feels this way, but I'll do jumping jacks and feed my plants PEZ if someone can prove to me that it is beneficial.

  5.     
    #4
    Senior Member

    Incandescents staging a comeback

    why not just go with LEDs?

    i feel ya irydyum....i do love PEZ though!


    -shake

  6.     
    #5
    Senior Member

    Incandescents staging a comeback

    Some of you may have already seen this on another thread, but I thought I'd share it with you different light loverS!

    [YOUTUBE]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lTGsM9pplUs[/YOUTUBE]

  7.     
    #6
    Senior Member

    Incandescents staging a comeback

    I agree. That is the new future of lighting.

  8.     
    #7
    Senior Member

    Incandescents staging a comeback

    Things are probably going to be crazy expensive, but probably worth it in the long run if the hype built up to it doesn't famish. Just imagine doing a micro grow with one of those! OOOOO or even a grow in a room 10X10 with a whole bunch of them!

  9.     
    #8
    Senior Member

    Incandescents staging a comeback

    Quote Originally Posted by headshake
    why not just go with LEDs?

    i feel ya irydyum....i do love PEZ though!


    -shake
    As you and others here know I love LEDs, but the cheapest and easiest source of Far Red 770nm is a simple incandescent (philips red glass party) bulb. I use them.

  10.     
    #9
    Senior Member

    Incandescents staging a comeback

    I'm gonna subscribe to this just in case the discussion fruits results

    SMG

  11.     
    #10
    Senior Member

    Incandescents staging a comeback

    Click the title below for original link!

    Breakthrough: Regular Light Bulb Made Super-Efficient with Laser (!)




    Everything is Better with Lasers
    What if you could take a regular incandescent lightbulb, zap it with a powerful laser for a small fraction of a second, and make it about twice as efficient as a regular lightbulb? That seems to be what researchers at the University of Rochester did. What does the laser do? It creates an "array of nano- and micro-scale structures on the surface of [the] regular tungsten filamentā??the tiny wire inside a light bulbā??and these structures make the tungsten become far more effective at radiating light." Read on for more details.

    "We've been experimenting with the way ultra-fast lasers change metals, and we wondered what would happen if we trained the laser on a filament," says Chunlei Guo, associate professor of optics at the University of Rochester. "We fired the laser beam right through the glass of the bulb and altered a small area on the filament. When we lit the bulb, we could actually see this one patch was clearly brighter than the rest of the filament, but there was no change in the bulb's energy usage." [...] During its brief burst, Guo's laser unleashes as much power as the entire grid of North America onto a spot the size of a needle point. That intense blast forces the surface of the metal to form nanostructures and microstructures that dramatically alter how efficiently light can radiate from the filament.
    The laser is very powerful, but the pulse is so short (in the femtosecond range - "a femtosecond is to a second what a second is to about 32 million years") that it actually requires very little energy and can even be powered from a regular wall outlet.
    The team has also succeeded in making the bulb produce polarized light without the use of a filter.

    Making Incandescent Bulbs Greener
    If this works as well as the University of Rochester claims, it sounds like a big breakthrough to me. Once this process is commercialized and scaled, it probably would be very inexpensive and there wouldn't be any reason to keep selling regular incandescent bulbs.
    In fact, if this technology can be further improved, maybe cheap incandescent bulbs will compete against CFLs in energy efficiency, minus the mercury and higher price tag. LEDs will probably still have the upper hand in longevity and directionality, but cost will probably stay higher for a while longer...



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