where do you live?230V
where do you live?230V
I put Great Value LED bulbs in my garage door opener around 2016-2018-ish and haven't had any issues. I would have to replace rough duty bulbs yearly.
For the environment!You will just go from filament failures to circuit board failures...
I find them hard on my old eyes. LCD too.For the environment!
And yes, LED's do use less power for more visible photons.
Oh how true! On the hardwired ones I speak of in the previous post. Amazing when you read "15 year life" yeah, maybe but that is the LEDs not the circuit board. This is the hardwired I speak of. I got 25 of them, when pricing I think they are around $25 each! Unreal. A few replaced under warranty last year where the electrician thought they had a bad run. However this year, I have two that are starting to flicker, makes me wonder for the coming year/yearsYou will just go from filament failures to circuit board failures...
My mom’s antique oven uses a normal lightbulb , no led doesn’t work thereYes imo they do replace rough duty.. but they cant be 100% enclosed if you are going to have them on for longer amounts of time.
and wrong ones can interfere with door opener signal.
I had one that totally blocked the signal.. wouldnt work right outside the door.
Swapped it for a different brand and now it works 200ft away again.
You don't need rough service bulb for that.. so its a niche where you need an incandescent bulb.My mom’s antique oven uses a normal lightbulb , no led doesn’t work there
Considering normal bulbs aren’t sold rough service it is.You don't need rough service bulb for that.. so its a niche where you need an incandescent bulb.
I wouldn't use a led bulb even in an EZ bake oven![]()
Appliance bulbs are sold... although at this point it seems like you are more interested in exceptions and splitting hairs.Considering normal bulbs aren’t sold rough service it is.
Good bulbs, I've used these in the past too and the only drawback is that is that their beam direction is quite narrow as opposed to the glass LEDs (not a specific issue to the Feits, but rather to this commonly used bulb design). I've since gone that direction for all my table lamps as I don't need to bat signal my ceiling but like a more even spread of light. But, that means my heat sinks are smaller so arguably questionable on longevity. However, a minimum of 90CRI is most important and the Feits fit the bill there.I am a HUGE fan of these bulbs from Feit Electric called Enhance.
Nice, bright, clean accurate light. Super great in the home or garage door. I never had one fail and before them I have been through many brands. Some years back I threw out every bulb from every light fixture in our 3000 sq ft home and put these in.
Yes, I agree with that plastic base blocks downward light, good catch.Good bulbs, I've used these in the past too and the only drawback is that is that their beam direction is quite narrow as opposed to the glass LEDs (not a specific issue to the Feits, but rather to this commonly used bulb design). I've since gone that direction for all my table lamps as I don't need to bat signal my ceiling but like a more even spread of light. But, that means my heat sinks are smaller so arguably questionable on longevity. However, a minimum of 90CRI is most important and the Feits fit the bill there.
You're not kidding! I remember as a kid on my parents home, if I closed the Den door with the lights on the room would eventually get to warm inside. *LOL*I find them hard on my old eyes. LCD too.
I use to be able to darn near heat the house with the old lightbulbs.....
Yup. Not all LED's are the same. Many die an early death because they are built out of junk. But I've seen working LED's from the 80's as recently as 2022 or so.Quality counts.
Worst are CFL. Forget about it. Environmental failure. I have buckets of failed CFLs.
Regular duty, cheapo incandescent bulbs. NG. HD ones I got some slightly better life back in the day.
LED. So far GOOD QUALITY outdoor use LEDs are lasting and lasting for us. So yes.
where do you live?