The Biden Administration’s rules seek to make lighting cheaper and less polluting

  • discodoubloon@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    It’s not super extreme for those that haven’t read the article. Technically it bans everything less efficient than 45 lumens per watt if it’s over 310 lumens. This typically translates to most “60W” bulbs and up.

    This means a lot of appliance bulbs, small candelabra fixture bulbs, and things like lava lamp bulbs that need the heat to function are going to stick around for the foreseeable future.

    Im glad this is happening now since LED tech at this point looks better than incandescent if you spend enough (like $3 bulb). If this happened 5 years ago like planned it would have been a small disaster.

    • elscallr@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      My Hue bulbs cost like $15 but god damn I love them. Every ceiling fan in my house is now dimmable from my phone. My game room has lights that I can change the colors of to make my DnD games more immersive. And since they’re LED they’ll probably last for ages.

      • nicetriangle@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        Yeah they really are a big quality of life upgrade. Being able to shift your lights to a nice warm color and dim them all instantly is amazing. Makes the house so much cozier at night. Every time we do it, it’s and instant mood shift.

        • elscallr@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          It made it a lot easier for me to sleep, too. Being able to go from “lightly lit and more cool” to “very little but quite warm” light about an hour before bed helps my brain figure out that sleeping should be done at night.

      • CeruleanRuin@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        I got a couple of smart bulbs a while ago, but I’m apparently the only one in the house willing to use them through a phone or smart speaker Everyone else just turns the lamps of at the switch, which completely defeats the purpose. I gave up on the idea until such time as I can buy some with a manual toggle included.

        • DarkGamer@kbin.socialOP
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          1 year ago

          Hue makes programmable wall switches, but if you have a smart speaker hooked up to them you can just ask it to dim the lights or make them red or whatever. I find that’s handy for color modes and settings that one might not use very often.

        • elscallr@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          I stuck a tablet on the wall using Command Strips and it just stays plugged in, in case I want to change the lighting but my phone is across the room.

    • doricub@reddthat.com
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      1 year ago

      Honestly, this is very annoying for me as I use an incandescent bulb to keep my well pump just above freezing during the winter months. It’s going to be a huge pain finding a low power heater as a replacement. Most of what I’m finding are made for submersible use for things like fish tanks and burn up if not used underwater.

      • DarkGamer@kbin.socialOP
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        1 year ago

        Heat lamps are exempt.

        The new rule bans the manufacture and sale of inefficient “general service lamps,” which largely refers to the standard kinds of light bulbs you’d use to illuminate your home. Most incandescent and halogen light bulbs fail to meet these new energy efficiency standards, and are therefore banned by the rule.
        The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) has carved out exceptions for many different kinds of light bulbs in its ban on the manufacturing and sale of energy inefficient light bulbs.
        “It does not ban the sale or manufacture of ALL incandescent bulbs, just those common household incandescent (and other) bulbs that are not energy-efficient,” the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) says of the new ban. “Many bulbs, including specialty bulbs, three-way bulbs, chandelier bulbs, refrigerator bulbs, plant grow lights and others, are exempt from the law’s requirements.”

        • SCmSTR@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          If it’s supposed to just produce light, but is wildly inefficient and disposable, banned, since we have vastly superior tech for that, and have for a while.

          If it’s actually got a purpose, like heating things at a specific level, that is not a lightbulb, that is a heater and/or a light.

          Get a million hour low power led light, and a super low power radiant heat coil. You’re already paying a bunch of money and making a bunch of trash, just buy them once now, all y’all hillbilly mechanics.

          I get the usecases, most of them are absolutely valid. But with the need, eventually comes a solution.

          To doricub @doricub: if you believe it’s a widespread issue, you could be the first to design and sell energy efficient and durable, low-cost solutions to this problem. With problems, come opportunities. Help the commonwealth, make some profit. Just be real and don’t inaccurately misjudge the demand and potential and make either really cheap crap or really expensive stuff. Check out copyright law in your region and internationally, and investigate the problem and possible solutions, science is your friend. I hope you make something cool.

          After highschool, one of my best friends had a 4runner that he built up in the marine corps on the east coast. He was a mechanic. When he drove back to the west coast, where we live, that thing was stored in his dad’s backyard for like two years under a blue tarp. He kept a (incandescent) work light on an extension cord in there, and it effectively kept the thing clean and dry. I later helped him rebuild that 22R motor over a week in the snow and learned a ton. That was such a cool experience that I’m really thankful to have.

          My point is, there are needs all over. Yours is, most likely, totally valid. But, technologically, we gotta go forwards, and honestly, you could be a step forwards with that. You’ve said you can only find things not meant for what you want? That’s FANTASTIC. Buy a few incandescent bulbs now, to hold you over, but start researching a solution that fits. I know a lot of this stuff requires some investment, but that’s the ACTUAL point to copyright law. Seriously, I hope you do this and make it work. That would be awesome to see. You can absolutely do it, it really isn’t hard to design something, and find fabrication plants to make parts and send them to you, then sell your COPYRIGHTED goods (for the love of god, look up basic copyright law) at a profit to people that need them. I hope you AT LEAST make back your time and resource investment.

          Also, there are a few main ways to advertise. Because once you get your product made, you’ll have to show THE RIGHT PEOPLE THAT IT EXISTS AND THAT THEY NEED IT AND HOW TO GET IT;) (big, overly-obvious wink).

          Good luck.

        • Piramic@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          Wont that use the same amout of electricity as a 60w light bulb, but with the added annoyance of it not just screwing into the place the light bulb was?

          How is it any better than just using a light?

          • enoqe@kbin.social
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            1 year ago

            I am no electrician, but this looks to be applicable to longer sections of pipes. Instead of the heat being focused to just the areas reachable by visible light, this would allow for thawing around bends, longer distances, tighter / smaller spaces, etc.

            It still uses power to generate heat, but that 60W will likely be way more efficiently applied to pipes. Bulbs will be quite lossy because heat goes through the air to reach nearby pipes (and any other nearby objects), whereas this is physical wires applied directly around said pipes.

            • Calcharger@kbin.social
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              1 year ago

              Conduction vs Convection, yeah. Conduction is going to be way faster / more efficient.

              Might even be able to put it on a variable switch and build some logic with a raspberry pi so you don’t need all 60w.

          • CmdrShepard@lemmy.one
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            1 year ago

            To step back a bit, don’t you consider it annoying that you need to heat pipes full of water and the best solution they could come up with 70 years ago was to add a lightbulb socket several feet away from the pipes?

      • Madison_rogue@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        You can purchase a heat lamp instead, as it’s designed for the purpose you describe. They’re larger in diameter, but they fit in a standard light socket.

      • 8bitguy@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        When I had a well house, I used a ‘brooder’ lamp bulb. They’re pretty easy to find. The ones for reptiles are usually around 150 watts. The ones for birds are a bit more wattage and possibly overkill depending on your region and how well insulated your well house is.

    • DarkThoughts@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      While I generally like them, in the lamp in my main room, which has 3 sockets, they are very audibly humming (Philips).
      Still insane going from like regular 40W bulbs to something like 13W LED bulbs, which are about as bright as regular 100W ones (it says 1521 lumen). It’s such a stark difference in brightness while eating just a fraction of the previous wattage.

    • Tavarin@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      For some reason LED bulbs in my condo start flickering and die after only a few months of use. No idea why, but I actually switched back to incandescent because throwing away so many LED bulbs is more inefficient than running higher power bulbs.

      • DarkGamer@kbin.socialOP
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        1 year ago

        Sounds like your condo may not have properly grounded power, some of mine flicker for that same reason. Have you tried CFLs? Not as nice light but it might solve your issue.

        • Tavarin@lemmy.ca
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          1 year ago

          Yeah, those worked fine, but all the stores around me stopped selling them. I can only get LEDs, or I can get decorative style incandescents, so I’ve been buying the latter.

      • elscallr@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        Check the enclosures. LED lights have controller boards that have to be cooled, lest they burn up. Some enclosures are just not compatible with LED bulbs or you may need a different style. You might consider halogen. They’re still incandescent but far more energy efficient and, unlike CFLs, they don’t require s hazmat suit to clean up when they break.

        That said, CFLs are pretty awesome little feats of engineering too.

        Check out the Technology Connections YouTube page. Dude has a few videos on lighting you might benefit from having watched.

        • CoderKat@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          Lol when I was reading the first bit of your comment, I wondered “hmm, does this person also watch Technology Connections”?

          He’s also where I get all my knowledge of light bulbs from. He makes it all so fascinating.

        • Tavarin@lemmy.ca
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          1 year ago

          They managed to go faulty in a free standing lamp without a shade, just completely open, so I don’t think heat is an issue; something in the wiring must be messing with them.

          I have used some halogens, but I haven’t found many I like the light of. Might try some others to see how they look.