By Mark J. Donovan
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Compact Fluorescent Light
Bulbs (CFL bulbs) can save you a lot of money, but not necessarily as much as
proponents and home improvement stores suggest.
Technically Compact
Fluorescent Light Bulbs use only a quarter of the power as incandescent
light bulbs and they are typically guaranteed for 8000 hours versus 500
hours, respectively. Compact Fluorescent Light Bulbs cost around $3.00
(during sales) whereas an incandescent typically goes for around $0.50.
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Though a Compact
Fluorescent light bulb costs about 6 times as much as an incandescent bulb,
it lasts 16 times longer and uses only ¼ the power of the incandescent bulb.
As a result, Compact Fluorescent Light Bulbs make a lot of financial sense,
at least in the simple math.
The problem with Compact
Fluorescent Light Bulbs is that they have a fixed number of times that they
can be turned on before they begin to fail. As a result, they are not
appropriate for lighting applications where the light will be turned on and
off frequently. Compact Fluorescent Light Bulbs are meant to be turned on
and left on for long periods of time (e.g. 3 hours or more). Thus, Compact
Fluorescent Light Bulbs are probably not meant for bathrooms or bedrooms
where lights are turned on and off frequently. They may however be
appropriate for living rooms and kitchens where lights may be left on much
longer in the evening.
In addition, thought
Compact Fluorescent Light Bulbs do not create a great deal of heat
themselves, they are however sensitive to it. As a result, they are not
appropriate for recessed lights or enclosed lighting fixtures. Because of
the excess heat build up in these types of lights, the Compact Fluorescent
Light Bulbs will fail in short order.
The other consideration
with Compact Fluorescent Light Bulbs is that they contain trace amounts of
Mercury and thus should not be simply thrown away when they fail. Instead
they should be taken back to the store where you purchased them or to a
recycling plant that can properly handle them. The Mercury levels associated
with Compact Fluorescent Light Bulbs are safe, when the bulb is left in its
natural state (unbroken). So failed bulbs should be returned to stores or
recycling plants left undamaged.
All this said, Compact
Fluorescent Light Bulbs (CFLs) have a bright future and can save homeowners
a great deal of money. Used in appropriate applications, a Compact
Fluorescent Light Bulb will pay for itself after just 500 hours of use (e.g.
100 days at 5 hours per day). CFLs are available in a variety of white
lighting shades including “Warm White”,
“Cool White”,
“Soft White”, and “Day”
light tones.
So the next time you are
contemplating a Compact Fluorescent Light bulb sale at your local home
improvement store, think where you will use them in your home before you
decide on how many to actually buy.
For information on Changing a Light
Switch, See HomeAdditionPlus.com's "How
to Change a Light Switch Ebook". It provides detailed, easy to
understand, step-by-step instructions and pictures, on how to replace a
Light Switch.
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