Re: [RE-wrenches] CFL lighting and the mercury hazard.Hi Ian,

Lighting is an important wrench design issue, but I don't want to sound like I 
am bitching about CFLs so this is my last post on this subject.

There are lots of lighting choices. Our home office is lit with full spectrum 
fluorescent tubes. Our den has mixed CFLs and incandescents that give us the 
fast brightness and light quality that we want. We did not like the CFLs in our 
kitchen so we gave them away. We haven't given up on CFLs. We want lights that 
are reliable, long-lasting, illuminate quickly, render color pleasantly, emit 
little waste heat, are reasonably priced, do not foul the environment, have 
reasonable life-cycle cost, reduced embedded energy, etc.and are open to 
suggestions.

Best regards,
Joel Davidson



  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Ian Woofenden 
  To: RE-wrenches 
  Sent: Tuesday, December 09, 2008 4:31 PM
  Subject: Re: [RE-wrenches] CFL lighting and the mercury hazard.




  Hi Joel,


  (Michael, should this go to RE-Bitching or something?)


  I wonder if you are encouraging your clients to use incandescents.


  CFLs are not perfect, but they are a big step forward.


  And there is certainly a wide variety of quality. Saying that CFLs are poor 
quality is like saying "cars are poor quality" -- ignoring the difference 
between a Hyundai and a Tesla (or something).


  Also, light quality is very subjective. Some people like light on the 2700 
Kelvin end of the range ("warm" yellow) and others on the 6000 Kelvin end 
("cool" white).


  Personally, I think the fact that the brighten up slowly is a wonderful 
feature. I'm glad the days of delay and blink are pretty much gone though.


  If we are not promoting (good quality) CFLs (with wattage and color 
temperature appropriate to the client's situation and taste), we are promoting 
3 to 4 times the energy use and PV system size. Hmm.


  Best,


  Ian




    Some more added thoughts. I am all for reducing lighting electrical 
consumption, but only if the "improvement" is somehow better, faster, cheaper.
     Almost all CFLs have poor light quality and take time to brighten up to 
full intensity. Also, if you don't like mercury, then thank the Bush 
administration for changing the Clean Air Act mercury limit from 5 tons to 26 
tons per year for power plants. Sleaze like that travels all the way up and 
down the mercury supply line.

      ----- Original Message -----
      From: Peter Parrish
      To: 'RE-wrenches'
      Sent: Tuesday, December 09, 2008 12:09 PM
      Subject: Re: [RE-wrenches] CFL lighting and the mercury hazzard.


      Carl is correct. I would add two thoughts. We have been buying CFLs from 
Home Depot, Ikea and we have been getting freebies from the Los Angels 
Department of Water and Power. Both the Ikea and freebies fail in 1-2 years, so 
the story about 5-7 years life is a WAG. Second, let's all hold our collective 
breath: LEDs will rule the illumination market fairly soon just as they have 
conquered the indication market for many years now. It would be great if anyone 
has accumulated some lifetime statistics on LED lighting.

      - Peter

      Peter T. Parrish, Ph.D., President
      California Solar Engineering, Inc.
      820 Cynthia Ave., Los Angeles, CA 90065
      Ph 323-258-8883, Mobile 323-839-6108, Fax 323-258-8885
      CA Lic. 854779, NABCEP Cert. 031806-26
      [EMAIL PROTECTED]

--------------------------------------------------------------------------

      From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Carl 
Emerson
      Sent: Tuesday, December 09, 2008 11:58 AM
      To: 'RE-wrenches'
      Subject: [RE-wrenches] CFL lighting and the mercury hazzard.

      Hi there,

      We have for years been advocating the use of energy efficient Compact 
Fluorescent Lighting (CFL) to reduce loads and reduce system cost.

      A recent study by DEP in Maine has raised the alarm about mercury 
poisoning form these bulbs. If there is a breakage the resulting levels of 
mercury on the floor of the house are well above acceptable limits. Secondly 
there seems to be little serious effort to safely recycle these bulbs in a 
manner that keeps the mercury out of the eco system.

      I understand that LED lamps are mercury free. This would seem to be a 
much safer alternative.

      While many of us have mercury amalgams in our mouth the mercury is 
supposedly in a form that is not significantly ingested, whereas the mercury in 
a CFL is in vapour form when hot and powder form when cold, and therefore can 
pose a hazard to health.

      Can I suggest some discussion on this and can we do our best to keep it 
scientific, I don't mean to spread emotional alarm without due cause.

      Thanks,

      Carl Emerson
      Free Power Ltd.
      Auckland N.Z.

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-- 
Ian Woofenden <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Senior Editor, Home Power magazine
  Subscriptions: $24.95 per year PO Box 520, Ashland, OR 97520 USA  
800-707-6585 (US), 541-512-0220
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