Since we had a (standard incandescent) torchiere light short out internally and burn up its socket rather spectacularly last night, I went looking to see if there was an easy way to replace its guts with an LED solution. And I found something very interesting.
Briefly, if you google for LED home lighting, you'll find that there's all kinds of LED home lighting devices on the market ... in Australia. Here in the US, there ain't jack, and what little there is, is horrendously overpriced -- $130 for a standard-form-factor medium-base bulb that, as far as I can tell given the inconsistent and confusing way they list the specifications, appears to be the rough equivalent of about a 30W incandescent bulb. (At that, it consumes 13W -- so if their published specs accurately represent reality, they've managed to make an LED light that's only about half as efficient as a compact fluorescent that costs twenty times less. Who in their right mind is going to buy that? They should surely be getting a HELL of a lot more light output from 13W worth of LEDs.)
For now, I guess I'll be just putting a new incandescent fitting into it. Hopefully, I'll be able to find a decent-quality one. (I shudder every time I look at replacement light sockets at the hardware store and see cardboard insulation. Whiskey tango foxtrot, over?!?)
no subject
I understand the three reasons. They closely mirror my own reasons for wanting to switch to LED's. I am trying to set my house up for wind power. I have a homemade windmill up right now. Not much in the way of output, but anything that offsets the cost of my computer's runtime is worthwhile.