Re: Light bulbs being banned!!
ROTFLMAO
Guys, don't believe everything you read. I retired from Law Enforcement and am now in the Lighting Industry as my second career. The incandescent bulb was not banned. Actually, under G.W. Bush, the 110th Congress passed the
2007 Energy Independence and Security Act, that mandates higher efficacy requirement on incandescent light bulbs to be instituted in a multi-step process begining in 2012. However in typical government fashion, there are caveats, lots of caveats, specifically a list a mile long of exception to the law of incandescent bulbs that are affected and all are pertaining to residential lighting. The efficacy requirement will drive up the cost of incandescent light bulbs because of tooling and R&D that manufacturers will need to invest in the 100+ year old technology, effectively bring the cost of an ole A-19 60 watt relative to a CFL in the marketplace. Why would the manufactures do this, because they have invested greatly in CFL technology in the past 20 years, and are putting the money that could be used into LED. Which ironically, LED has been around for 50+ years.
For those that absolutely hate the light that a CFL puts out, look for bulbs with the
Energy Star label of approval on it. As there are so many "Green" marketing scams out there, it can be hard to get the right bulb, especially those that have the correct
Color Rendering Index. Example; go to Home Depot and look at all the CFL's they have in green boxes, then actually look for the ones with the Energy Star label on them, the isle narrows considerably. The EPA Energy Star approval process guaranty's that the bulb is third paty tested, turns on within a half second without flicker, and has a CRI of 82 or more. Essentially the same light that you get out of an A-19 60 watt bulb, but instead of getting 70% heat and 30% light, you get 70% light and 30% heat. That being said, if you were take an Energy Star fixture and hang it next to an incandescent fixture, you couldn't tell the difference unless you look at the actual bulb.
regarding those <span style="color: #FF0000"><span style="font-weight: bold"><span style="font-style: italic">NASTY</span></span></span> toxins in a CFL, thats nonsense to nth degree. The only toxin that is in a CFL is a trace amount of mercury. Here is a statistic for you; what is the largest pollutant of mercury into the atmosphere? Crematorium's, what you say, well all the dead folk that get cremated, their fillings put more mercury into the atmosphere than all the CFL light bulbs combined ever could. Here is another one for you, if your city gets its energy from a coal producing facility, that facility puts more mercury into the atmosphere generating the energy needed to light your incandescent light bulb than it does to light your CFL.
Sometimes change is good, sometimes its not, but with the ever increasing energy prices, this one is good.