



Results 1 to 15 of 24
Thread: LED globe lifespan
-
4th June 2023, 06:13 PM #1
LED globe lifespan
We seem to have terrible luck with LED globes. It doesn't seem to matter whether they are cheapies, or high end brands, such as Philips. The one in our computer room kept switching itself off or flashing - we could turn it off at the switch and it would work again, until it got too frequent and terribly annoying. 18W globe, and not in a light fitting, only a batten holder. It was on most days, and about three or so years old. We finally got sick of it and changed the globe. This morning one of the kitchen ones simply stopped working, also in a batten holder. Again, nowhere close to the kind of life span that is advertised.
Stupidly we didn't keep a database of when we installed them. Are the advertised lifespans of ten years real, or just wishful thinking?
-
4th June 2023, 06:46 PM #2
The electronics seem to fail well before the LED chip. They should be forced to advertise the MTBF of the whole lamp rather than the LED.
-
Post Thanks / Like - 0 Thanks, 1 Likes, 0 , 0
BobL liked this post
-
5th June 2023, 10:28 AM #3
i have found phillips brand suck, fail really early in life. same with a few others ive tried.
i look after many hundreds of globes, replacing globes weekly pretty much around the place.
best ones i have found to date, never yet had one fail in the 18 months i have been using them are these AT9460 - Atom Lighting in both screw and bayonet type
i will not use anything other than these types while im not having any issues.
im a person who dates globes as well when i install to gauge life spans.
-
Post Thanks / Like - 0 Thanks, 2 Likes, 0 , 0
-
5th June 2023, 11:20 AM #4
I hope you don't mind me hijacking this thread, but it reminded me of something. I've got some globes (bought cheaply from an auction site) that have an unusual base. I haven't a clue who'd normally use them or maybe I'm just not up with new trends. The box describes the base as GX24q-2.
Does anyone know what they're for or who would use them?
globe.JPG
-
5th June 2023, 11:53 AM #5
I agree. flickering LEDs are signs of an electronics issue.
The 20 AEG LED tubes I bought for my shed in 2015 are all still working, except one which was close to my welding bench so I suspect it was an electronic problem cause by a welding pulse. The replacement has been in place for more than 3 years and seems to be coping OK, When I put the new one in I noticed it was definitely brighter than the old ones.
The 3, ~7,000 lumen LED ring lights bought a couple of years back are all still working but I notice one is flickering more than the other.
The 4, 2700 Lumen Phillips globes for my Macro stand are more than 5 years old and still working.
One of the 3 x 10,000 lumen panels I bought in 2021 and put in the welding Bay died, the other is fine.
The Luce Bella Bunnings globes I buy for the kitchen seem to last 2-3 years about same as the Phillips or Osrams.
-
Post Thanks / Like - 0 Thanks, 1 Likes, 0 , 0
jack620 liked this post
-
5th June 2023, 12:03 PM #6
Changed out all fluro tubes in the shed, about 25, and the few I had in the house for AEG tubes.
Removed the balast and starter and re-wired to the diagram provided. Active to one and and neutral to the other. Some were installed years ago and I have not had a failure yet. Excellent light.
Regards,
John
-
Post Thanks / Like - 0 Thanks, 1 Likes, 0 , 0
BobL liked this post
-
5th June 2023, 02:51 PM #7
I inherited a lot of retrofit CLA brand LED bayonet and Edison screw bulbs when I bought the current property 6 years ago. I didn't like the yellow light colour so replaced with Mirabella, then Philips. All the Philips are the better quality ones, not the supermarket ones, though they are about the same price. The original ones got repurposed to friends or sheds, etc. I have about 60 active LED bulbs and only 1 failure in 6 years. I run off-grid solar with a Selectronics SP Pro inverter, which produces first grade electricity with no under or over voltages, frequency variations, surges, spikes or noise - much better than the mains stuff from the gird - so maybe that helps. If grid connected, a surge suppressor in the switchboard is mandatory IMHO.
-
5th June 2023, 06:09 PM #8
-
Post Thanks / Like - 1 Thanks, 0 Likes, 0 , 0
ErrolFlynn thanked for this post
-
5th June 2023, 09:02 PM #9
Can failures be attributed to our varying voltage supplies. We changed to 230 but that was in name only. Perhaps much electronic manufacturing is geared to 220 but another issue is that of dirty power when the off peak frequencies are sent though usually out of hours except for standby equipment. Just a guess.
-
5th June 2023, 11:03 PM #10
-
6th June 2023, 05:14 PM #11
-
6th June 2023, 05:30 PM #12
I have the same situation and the distributor cane out to look at it. The inspector said this is a problem they are having everywhere with everyone feeding power back into the grid during the day but they can’t wind the supply back because it would be under spec at night when there is maximum load and no solar.
-
6th June 2023, 06:44 PM #13
Beardy is correct. They dropped the voltage at the transformer at the end of the street by 7V when I complained a few years ago. But they can’t drop it any more or it will go under the spec when the sun isn’t shining.
-
6th June 2023, 07:47 PM #14
WA was 250 and now it's 240V. At Uni this played havoc with scientific gear that was rated at 220-230V so we had quite a few pieces of gear running off Variacs, nd home were regularly burning out incandescent globes.
-
6th June 2023, 08:57 PM #15
From Wikipedia:
“Since 2000, the nominal voltage in most areas of Australia has been 230 V, except for Western Australia and Queensland which both remain at 240 V”
That’d be right. 🙄
Similar Threads
-
G'day Ya'all From across the Globe..
By Lance1949 in forum G'day mate - THE WELCOME WAGON -Introduce yourselfReplies: 10Last Post: 7th September 2014, 12:03 AM -
G'Day from the top-side of the globe
By walt c in forum G'day mate - THE WELCOME WAGON -Introduce yourselfReplies: 12Last Post: 23rd December 2009, 01:55 PM
Bookmarks