Even the power consumption question is not so easy to answer. LEDs are normally compared to halogens rather than CFLs or incandescent. For my calculations I have compared (both from Amazon):
- 6W LED allegedly equivalent to a 50-60W halogen (1) (£60 for a pack of 6 so £10 each)
- 18W CFL allegedly equivalent to an 80W incandescent (2) (£12 for a pack of 2 so £2 each)
Based on electricity costs at 12p/kWh, the LEDs take 5000 hours of use to pay back the higher cost of the bulb compared to CFLs. At 3 hours a day that would be about 4.5 years. The LEDs should last a lot longer than that - a typical rated lifetime is 20,000 hours. The CFL should also last a lot longer - typically 10,000 hours or more. However, the CFL may not last that long if you only use it for short periods at a time. The performance on short cycle times is very variable and judging from this study, which, granted is using rather old data, a 15 minute cycle time could reduce the lifetime by three quarters or even more. Every time you switch a CFL bulb on and off the sputtering loses some of the emissive coating on the electrodes. However good design can minimise this effect and some bulbs did fine even with the short cycle time.
An LED bulb with aluminium (heat sink) casing |
There you have the answers to the three questions I posed above. LEDs use something like a third the energy of CFLs, they are cheaper if you take a long term view and they are probably greener overall. However, there are other reasons to prefer LEDs to CFLs. We have some in our house and we love them mainly because the light looks bright and comes on instantly. The trouble with CFLs is that when you turn them on it takes a while to come on to full brightness. That one issue is enough to swing the balance for me and I don't think I will ever buy a CFL again if I can afford the LED. Also, we don't use dimmer switches but if you do then you will be relieved to hear that you can get LEDs which are compatible with normal dimmer dials and use not too much extra energy (certainly a lot less than equivalent CFLs).
This is quite a complicated post so I have summarised the main points below.
Advantages of CFLs | Advantages of LEDs |
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(1) 6 x GU10 LED BULBS 6W WITH 27 x 5050 SMD LED's IN WARM WHITE ** SUPER BRIGHT GU10 LED LIGHT BULBS - THE BRIGHTEST SMD BULBS ON AMAZON EMITTING 450 LUMENS - EXTREMELY BRIGHT AND IDEAL FOR REPLACING 50W - 60W HALOGEN BULBS
(2) 6 x 18watt - now showing as equivalent to 82w conventional bulb
(3) Welcome to the Dark Side: The Effect of Switching on CFL Measure Life (2010)
(4) Life Cycle Assessment of Ultra-Efficient Lamps (2009)
(5) Auraglow 7 Watt LED GU10 Light Bulb, Warm White, 50 Watt Equivalent (dimmable)
Very informative and thorough, pity there are not more articles like these on the web - thanks
ReplyDeleteWhich is more efficient, running LED bulbs from 240v or running them from a 12v supply from say a switch mode power supply and how does the equation stack up when you include embodied energy?
ReplyDelete