I've worked at GE on the development of this bulb. Dimming of the halogen capsule instead of a sharp turn-off was actually patented by a competitor who never released a product like this. Also, this lamp has just about the smallest room for the driver electronics of all CFLs, so an actual temperature compensation simply did not fit. There existed a different version with heater wire wrapped around the CFL tube instead of the halogen capsule, providing ca. 10-second runup without the light intensity and color changes.
Would a PTC really take up more space than a capacitor? I sounds even simpler than the cap, so I guess there's a good reason you skipped it, but it seems kinda obvious, even for the time.
@@liryan But the patent system is so good for the bottom line of businesses... come now be reasonable, they just do not make enough money from us as it is, we have to allow them this protection XD, sigh...
One of the reasons I love this channel is for comments like this. Where else would we have an insider perspective on topics like these? Thank you for your comment!
I was looking for the patent you mentioned as I'm always curious how companies manage to get patents on relatively simple concepts. In the process, I stumbled upon a patent from Osram Sylvania filed in 2005 for controlling, switching, and dimming a halogen bulb with a temperature compensation circuit, so it looks GE was out of luck with that idea too.
As a child I believed the slow turning on was the reason energy-saving lamps saved energy. We still have a lot CFLs in the house, because they won’t die. I was so happy, when one of the CFLs in the ceiling light in the bathroom died. I could finally install a LED bulb so the light actually turns on when pressing the switch and not five minutes later.
My parents told me that every time I complained about how shit they were. The worst part is they still have a bunch of the first generation in their house so when I go to visit in some rooms the lightswitch takes forever 🤦
My great aunt had vision problems in her house. I replaced all her lights with led last year. She can actually read her books again! CFLs are slow and full of mercury! Her electric bill is down by over half!
When this was an issue for me I just installed a single low-power incandescent and the rest were CFL so I would get some light immediately and then a lot of light in a few minutes
love how so much R&D was poured into fluorescent lighting only for LEDs to just immediately become the singular best lighting technology, and for old style halogens to probably stay way more common due to cars
"Singular best" is a stretch; personally I'm tired of every light source moving to LEDs, ESPECIALLY car headlights. There are trade-offs with any solution, like his "sodium lamp streetlight vs LED streetlight" video.
I did the conversion of the 5°F for y'all: It's -15°C, 464° Rankine, 215.15 Kelvin, about -3°Rømer, -6.7°Newton, 180°Delisle, and -16°Réaumur Edit: Whoopsie - 0x8badf00d caught me in a mistake; it's not 215,15 Kelvin, but 258,15 Kelvin!
I expected Celsius and Kelvin my good sir but you have outdone yourself. It's been years since I ever had to convert from those strangely inverted °Delisle.
In the early 2000s, I swipped a CFL from a house I was leaving with 5 other tenants. It had a "globe" envelope, started very dim, and had a long warmup. The temperature was nice and low (I too am sensitive to clinically white interior illumination.) I used it as my bedside lamp for about 12 years, during which it came on in the morning when I woke up and burned all day until I went to bed. I still miss that bulb.
Hey, it might be a really useful site! ;-) But seriously, I'm so tired of people repeating what other people say about not using Wikipedia as a resource, as if they're incapable of deciding for themselves how good the information on any particular article is, and can't actually engage with any argument based on a Wikipedia article.
I have been a lighting consultant and owned my lighting supply for over 43 years and it’s been the energy laws that my state, California caused the country to eventually have to follow. In the beginning of the mandatory use of CFLs, dimming as not an option and one color temperature was how we got them. Slowly they added the colors but, as usual, each manufacturer had a different idea of what a 3000 Kelvin or a 2700 Kelvin so you could not mix manufacturer’s as you could see a color shift. We also had a lot of issues with screw in units when the socket had to be in the up position and then there were life expectancy issues when the lamp was used in an enclosed fixture and bad light output when used in exterior fixtures in cold environments. I, for 1 am glad we have moved on and we do sell an interesting LED replacement bulbs that fit the existing PL type fixtures but if you can, replace the fixture with a dedicated LED light source given that you can get more light, higher lumens per watt in a safer package and will last 35 to 50,000 hours compared to 20,000 hours and should be disposed of as hazardous waste. My 2 cents.
@@fireltd2010 I mostly agree but I prefer fixtures where you can replace the bulb. If by dedicated LED light source you mean something that has non-replaceable bulbs, I wouldn't want to have to throw away the whole fixture if/when just a bulb fails. Even though they're supposed to last 50,000 hours, they're all made in China so I wouldn't be surprised if a lot of them fail prematurely.
Alec, I recently replaced the taillights on my MK6 VW Jetta, and you'll be tickled to know I specifically bought new fixtures that have amber colored rear turn signals; thus righting a decade-long wrong.
In some Mk4 Golfs and Jettas and all Mk5 Passats I always thought it was so cool how VW made the entire lens red, yet the turn signal was amber when lit. Always impressed me!
In the part of the California vehicle code that sets basic equipment standards, amber turn signals on the rear of a vehicle are specifically forbidden. I looked it up when I was a cabbie and had come across a Crown Vic that had them, and so I wondered why all of them didn't.
@@taxirob2248 Is this an odd april fools joke, or just a mistake? Takes 2 seconds to check - amber or red is allowed at rear, amber or white at the front. California Vehicle Code 24953
As a seventy-one year old, I consider myself fairly technologically intelligent. I am a retired broadcast radio engineer which had to be a jack of all trades. But I always learn something new from your videos. Keep up the good work.
You must love all these CFL and LED videos with their cheap junk (mostly) switching power supplies which create enormous RF interference. You also surely know the FCC certification on this junk is only a manufacturer statement of compliance and nothing is or ever has been actually tested by the FCC.
I wanted to take a moment of your time and say Thank You for all the years of informing and educating us. I have spent countless hours viewing your videos and it has impacted my life, "positively". THANK YOU.
Alec, have you considered covering ventilation as a topic? ERVs, bathroom and utility room fans vs in line duct fans, hood vents, etc? Air quality is on a lot of people's minds, and it would be cool if you covered all of the HVAC acronym!
This is also a possible side issue as talk is going around (to much consternation of the old fashioned set) about disincentivizing the gas stove due to the higher level of indoor air pollution it can generate compared to electric technologies. One obvious answer to this is better ventilation, but in order to avoid home heating energy waste needs to kick in only when needed for an operating gas stove. This should be a concern of kitchen remodelers and architects.
@@SeekingTheLoveThatGodMeans7648could you imagine using a gas stove when it’s -30 outside if it required ventilation, depending on how much fresh air we’re talking the furnace might not be able to keep up at super low temps
Furnaces typically recirculate indoor air, they don't draw from outside. On a well sealed modern house you really get very little fresh air unless you open windows. It also drags down the efficiency of bathroom and hood vent fans because they're fighting the negative pressure they create in your house.
A very good idea now when you (not Scandinavian) people start to insulate. It's unnecessary to repeat our mistakes. Good insulation must be accompanied by sufficient ventilation - otherwise poor indoor air quality and mold forming...
I'm convinced that Alec could make a 30 minute video about paint drying so interesting that I'd sit glued to my screen the entire time. Best channel on TH-cam.
You joke but there's interesting chemistry in that - evaporation of solvents but also polymerization reactions, sometimes with the air it's exposed to, possibly enhanced by catalysts which used to be toxic heavy metals but are usually less toxic now.
Brown paint's got some super interesting properties as it dries, since it has some hue changes as the different dyes react at different times. I'd gladly watch it.
My dad was an energy saving nerd. We still have some early CFLs in use, but everything was replaced with LEDs when they burned out. My dad used the very blue LEDs at first, but they have all since been replaced with soft white LEDs. Much better. I won't use anything but soft white LEDs in my own apartment.
CFLs starting out dim was a huge bonus for me, when I was a teenager my mom would wake me up in the morning by just opening the door and flipping the light switch on. Great way to start your day getting blinded as someone says "time for school". After replacing the lights in my room with CFLs I no longer got blinded first thing in the morning.
I really miss the slow start up in the bathroom, like mentioned in the video. It was great to be able to see that you were peeing all over the floor in your 3 am stupor without getting blinded by a full powered light.
@@Luciano_Intorno I think it sucks that they don't really make low power leds for bathroom, no I don't want a 40W incandescent equivalent, I'd take 15W to not hurt myself. Thankfully there's a solution, battery-powered leds that are motion activated and give you just enough light and last a pretty long time.
Ah - growing up in central Queensland it was rare to notice the low light output at the start for CFL's due to the ambient temps for most of the year. The lower heat output coming from the desk lamp next to you was always appreciated though. My Dad was an early adopter of these when they appeared on this side of the world. Pity LEDs took so long, it was years after I saw their power consumption comparisons on a Mythbusters episode before I could even buy one LED bulb in a specialty lighting shop over here! Oh, and I'm with you on the "thumbs down" to red turn signals cancelling the brake light. "I'm slowing down so I can turn" is clearly understandable with separate brake lights and turn signal light.
I just want to point out that "fix[ing] the sometimes" is one of the most fundamentally satisfying things in life to me, and I wish we would focus on it more as a species
2:30 UGLY? Slander. The twisty bulbs had character and charm. Their real weakness was that I always felt like I was going to snap the things when I went to screw them in tightly.
@@Blue-Maned_Hawk Between my bad memory and the fact that I haven't had to change a light bulb in ages, I can't actually remember if I ever broke one that way. I did break one of that style of bulb more recently though. ...because the lamp got knocked over.
I still use CFLs in my bathroom for the very reason you mentioned. When you first turn on the light you're not blinded by bright light. It gives time for your eyes to adjust.
Dimmable LEDs are a thing. My GE Z-wave smart switches have a cool feature where if you hold the switch in the down position when the switch is off the light will come on at 1% instead of the last setting. It’s nice for those midnight runs to the kitchen.
I have never seen a CFL take more than a second to reach full brightness. Of course, I live in Northern Australia, and have never experienced a night colder than about 6dC, so that might have something to do with it.
One of the good things about this channel is there's no huge over-sized microphone taking up 1/3 the image, and the sound is recorded with just the right amount of natural souding room reverberation to sweeten the audio.
1:18 Not only do I remember that Philips bulb, I have one in service to this day. Sure it was a bit pricey, but it's in a location that is hard to get at. It's longevity and 'instant on' have made it's initial cost absolutely worthwhile.
My experience is pretty much the opposite, I had tons of those bulbs, but they had extremely short lifespans, way shorter than incandescent, and were ridiculously expensive. I did like the color rendering, but any hope of saving money over the long run vanished really quickly when I discovered how short their lifespan was.
I'd like to have one of those for historical purposes. I don't even like its ugly yellow beam; I just like what it meant for the lighting industry, the first LED bulb to win the L-Prize Competition. Plus, remote phosphors are really cool.
These generally tend to run pretty hot. I've had one catch fire in the last year... well producing smoke. It did not have a cover on in (upside down as an unprotected ceiling light).
As a kid I enjoyed the slow startup of the CFLs, especially in the winter mornings. My eyes had a chance to "wake up" and adjust to a brighter room more slowly.
Nice profile pic! I personally find the instant on LEDs to be more favourable. My solution to lights being blinding is to have a weaker, easily accessible light in the room.
I use a dimmer. I turn it down as I'm winding down for bed because lower light helps me get ready to sleep and then when I wake up they are already low.
I enjoyed sitting in the bathroom doing my business when I suddenly I got this weird realization that it got brighter in the room. I loved watching our light sensing night light suddenly turn off after a minute of CFL warm up.
Seeing the "ground breaking light bulb from Phillips" brought back some serious memories, my father was an architectural advisor for a very wealthy neighborhood near me and these were all the rave. He would quite frequently take me on trips to see job sites and those boxes were everywhere! His passion turned me into an architect and I very much so remember these and feeling like they were foreign damn near alien lightbulbs when I was a kid!
My parents used a standard CFL in the garage forever in a cold climate, I don't know if it was in any way useful how dim in started out but I definitely got used to it and expected it growing up. I was visiting over last christmas and flipped the light on one night and about fell down the steps it was so bright, like the view from the neighbors house in Christmas Vacation. Guess that old bulb finally bit the dust and got LED'd!
I tend to accidently massively overspec LEDs when replacing CFLs, I keep underestimating the effect of age and the warm up do to their brightness. You'll definately be feeling it when I LED the house, my housemates can atest to that.
I replaced a CFL with one of those 3 way aimable LED units (from MENARDS!) in our garage and it's like Daylight in there. Did I leave the Garage door open? Nope, light's on.
I had a CFL for my garage that I bought in 2001 that served me faithfully over 4 different houses before finally failing in 2021. 20 years of service. Felt like I'd lost an old friend.
I had tubes with old fashion ballast in my garage and they were totally useless below -10c. At least, CFL would eventually come around with enough patience.
I liked the look, but they sucked in every other way. You could if you were a mad lad get a (broken?) CFL, blow,wash,suck? the phosphor out of the inside of it then string a flexible LED filament through it. You can buy them fairly cheap. You're going to want to lube the filament and the tube and use a pull string to get it in there but it'd work. Print up a new base for it or something with a power supply in it.
Very interesting and informative. The effort in making those time lapse recordings (of lamps starting in the cold) so succinct and clear to show a point is great! Alec, your deep dives are like relaxing nerd meditation to me. ❤
I received one of those “groundbreaking” yellow Phillips LED bulbs for free from a college recruiter event back in 2012. I still use it in my reading lamp and it’s still my favorite reading light. I’ve probably gotten much more than $60 worth of use out of it! Awesome product, and outlasted a few other led bulbs I’ve bought since then.
It's great fun when you rant! Greetings from Sweden, the country with snow half the year, and we never have problems with snow or ice on our street lights or car headlights...
I appreciate your onslaught and fight against red rear turn signals. As a European transplant living in the US, the amber turn signal reigns supreme and is way less confusing. I say that as an owner of a Mustang, whose sequential turn signals are some of the cooler out there. (Get it? They're LED. So cooler.)
We're different for sure. I recently drove someone from overseas and they were flabbergasted to learn that one simple green light is meant to control both through-traffic and left-turns. "How are you supposed to know if it's ok to turn?", they asked. I told them "When it looks like you won't die!"
Richard, trouble adapting may be due to what you are used to seeing. I grew up in the US and have been driving since 1971, I don't notice any difference between the amber or red turn signal, I just look for the flashing light as a notice of an impending turn. In the US, turn signal lights didn't become a standard feature on cars until the 1950's so, as a result, when I first got my driver's license, there was a significant amount of training associated with Hand Signaled Turns.
@@billharris6886I've lived in the US my entire life and have a vast preference for amber turn signals. A flash of red prompts a bit of mental processing to determine if the car is breaking briefly, turning, or hazarding. A flash of amber means a car is turning (or hazarding). The reverse of this was actually cited as a reason to mandate the third brake light. Since it is JUST a brake light, it is an immediate and unambiguous signal of braking. Animated brake lights are a complicated solution to a problem that only exists because we, as a country, allow cosmetics to be more important than safety.
Speaking of General Electric, did you know that they sometimes rebranded their fuses for a client? I've been volunteering on a 117 year old museum ship, and I found a bunch of fuses in the ship's ancient fuse panel. A lot of them are General Electric branded, but I found a few which were of the exact same model, but had one of two other types of alternate branding; one was a pair of diamonds with s's inside the diamonds, while the others were branded with a simple "C.P.R." - or Canadian Pacific Railway, the ships' original owner. Neat! I don't know if it would be worth covering for an episode, but I thought it was neat to share.
Huh, sounds like the physical object version of white labeling, which I guess probably predates the software version I'm getting familiar with at work these days.
@@gamemeister27 Physical objects definitely predate software white labeling. Lots of manufacturing companies (and chinese factories) will apply any branding you want to your order of product. This is why all these drop shipping stores are all selling the same things but with different brands. This is a very old practice.
@@gamemeister27 I've done translations for a Chinese water bottle manufacturer and they do quite a bit of white labeling alongside their OEM business. In their case, white labeled products are designed by the manufacturer and customized by the client (mainly logo adjustments and CMF options) while the OEM bottles are designed and exclusively sold by the client. They sell some of their white labeled products under a few of their own brands. A shocking amount of water bottles come from the same few factories, I'm guessing the same goes for many other daily items. That industry also has lots of copying, the specific manufacturer I worked for seems to market themselves as NOT copying others. On a side note, Smart Water Bottles are apparantly a thing now for whatever reason.
@@gamemeister27 I own an hardware store, and in my are is kind of the norm. For secondary items, usually. Like, a brand of "boutique" spanners offers hammers and tool boxes, too, to give full sets. But those low tech items are a generic hammer, painted in signature colour and branded to merge with the set. If clients wants to have a matching color set, and pays premium for it, well...
@@mtnentertainment3454Bicycles have been like that for ages - only a few manufacturers make most bicycles in China and Taiwan (Giant is one of them, who also make their own branded bikes). They'll build to your design, or they'll do the whole design & manufacture for you. Some of them make their very high end carbon fiber and boutique steel and/or aluminum frames in the US..
My father bought a couple of the non-hybrid CFLs from a shockingly high quality infomercial product. It's been like 10+ years of using them in two lamps and they both still work, nice warm light, take about 5 min to warm up.
Possibly the most interesting video you've done. Had no clue about many of the things you explained, and I'm normally a very curious person. Been using mostly CFL lamps since the 1980's when the first good ones came out in Europe, which was a Philips with electronic starter, very small footprint and straight tubes, no more flickering starts as the first ones. Crazy expensive though. Was about $18 back then. Still got one from the late 80's, and it works. Have loads of Osrams from that era also from their best line, only one has died, despite being used a LOT, until LED got really good.
Lol its wild to me to hear that dope looking spiral-shaped bulb being called "ugly." Never even occurred to me that someone could have preferred the look/shape of an incandescent lightbulb. Nor did the ~1 minute to full brightness ever bother me at all.
Why would anyone think a helix is ugly compared to an egg? And the time to full brightness, it depends on where it is. In a closet where you're just going to turn it on, grab a shirt, and turn it off? It could be pretty annoying. In almost every other location where you're going to leave it on for many minutes to hours? Why does it matter?
No offense, but 'never occurred to you someone would prefer the look/shape of an incandescent'? There's a whole trend right now of "Edison-style LEDs" that use led strips in the shape of fancy filaments to mimic the color and look of old bulbs. It's been a thing for almost a decade
I don't know _why_ but I loved the clear incandescents, and the look of horribly inefficient dimmed bulbs. The helix just seemed like such a kludge. Take a hot tube, wrap it up in a sizzling hot ball, and then stick heat-sensitive components right on top of it. The engineering, I'll admit, spoiled my appreciation for them. Perhaps, had they been sculpture vs functional, I would have thought them aesthetic.@@chitlitlah
I don't mind MPH to KM conversion, as it's a pretty easy *1.6. But F to C is hard man. Please keep it up for those that watch the entire video faithfully, thanks!
My friend taught me a trick for it. Fahrenheit maps to to perceived heat as percentage. 100 Fahrenheit is 37.7 degrees or 100% hot. 59 Fahrenheit is 15 Celsius or 59% hot. 0 Fahrenheit is - 18 degrees or 100% cold. :p
The ironic thing is that the Fahrenheit scale was invented to replace older temperature scales which used fractions. And now the USA is probably the only country that uses it, in the same time using fractions.
I used to work at a bank which had these extremely slow bulbs. It took about 5 minutes to get to full brightness. This video answers so many questions I had about them.
"And they did it by taking this already lightbulb in a light bulb looking light bulb and going full turducken on it by stuffing an incandescent light bulb in the middle of the fluorescent light bulb inside of the faux light bulb" THE WAY YOU SAY THIS IS EXACTLY WHY I WATCH YOU! (and maybe for the sciency stuff too lol).
Props for the graceful and careful way you put the old bulb down at 1:40 such that it didn't make a noise. Here's hoping you got that with very few takes! 💡😁👍
I worked at Home Depot in the electrical department from 2005-2016. I remember every single bulb you showed, and the price point of the yellow Philips LED. Customers made fun of that Yellow Philips LED price and that bulb so much!
Amalgam is a great word. Away back when if my dentist was doing a filling he would press an intercom button and say to his receptionist “prepare an amalgam please”.
Ya, those amalgams ruined my teeth. Because amalgams don't stick to the thooth, the dentist has to undercut the fill spot. That means more of the tooth is ground away. Then, amalgams expand over time, like 10 years cracking the tooth. I had 8 molars done when I was 15 and in my mid 20s my teeth would hurt then i'd get a lung infection every 3 months and almost died.
I never got the "CFL is ugly" thing. Then again, the amount of time I spend looking at light bulbs can be measured in the seconds putting it into the fitting, and pulling it out and throwing it in the bin.
I thought it was mostly about the light they put off. I was not as bothered by the cold, flat color fluorescents produce by default, but I can see the point. But I'm pretty sure they figured out other color temperatures eventually.
Heyyyy, I like the twisty boi look. Also there is something to be said about the engineering skill going into a device that had to twist molten glass into that spiral. Glass blowing of that level was probably incredibly expensive a few hundred years ago.
Am I the only one who appreciated CFL's slow run-up to full brightness? Especially in the overhead and vanity fixtures of my bathroom. I still use CFL vanity bulbs in there as getting pelted with five 40 watt equivalent bulbs at instant max brightness was a start to my day I never asked for...
You're right. It is fast for me to ask a search engine what 10F is in C. I can do that in about 5 seconds. But ... this video has more than 125,000 views. If 10% of the audience is in a non-Fahrenheit country, that's ~625,000 seconds spent on figuring that out. That's 173 hours spent on that. The energy usage of that alone will massively outspend what it'd take the creator to add "-12 °C" as a small piece of graphics.
It's also like a midroll ad. Sure, they're quick, but they're very annoying and take away from the immersion. Also, people usually complain to express their grievances, not to get a conversion.
I’m glad you have a lot of time for this stuff . You give me answers I may not find on my own , you may be…..different , but all the science / electrical, and engineering types are . And I say thank you !
Growing up we had a large energy efficient bulb in our ceiling fan in our living room and one of my favorite details about Christmas was waking up having the light turn on and not being able to see the entire living room but after 5 or 10 minutes and drinking some hot chocolate, the room was bright enough to see all of the presents that were under the tree and i got more hyped.
Ah yes... mention of the LED Traffic Light "but sometimes".... takes me back to the first time we met parasocially, first Technology Connections video I ever saw. I keep returning for the snarky entertainment but have accidentially learned a lot from these videos since then. :-)
My preference is to use both soft white and daylight bulbs. The soft white bulbs distort colors more orange while the daylight bulbs distort colors more blue. Using both seems like a good compromise.
@@rs12official Hmmm, let me check on that. 2700K - soft white (orange) 3000K - warm white (yellow) 4000K - cool white 5000K - daylight (blue) 4000K - 4100K is neutral white (which would be ideal) soft white + daylight could average 3850K warm white + daylight could be 4000k However, many of my fixtures have 3 or 5 bulbs, so it isn't a simple average. Checking the local Walmart, I see that they don't stock cool white bulbs (which would explain why I haven't seen them). However, they can be ordered. So, I'll give that a try in the future.
Fun fact; some CFLs would say on their packaging that using them base-up would result in a 15% reduction in brightness, likely due to the cold spot being made hotter due to convection. Also, i believe GE wasn't the first to make such a "hybrid" CFL, I believe there was a Japanese lame manufacturer who made a similar kind of CFL back in the early to mid 2000s, but i'm not sure if they ever made it to the United States, or if they even caught on for that matter.
I had one of the "small ring" fluorescent A19 bulbs in my room growing up ... kind of an initial try at a compact variety of fluorescent bulb. However, my room was in a basically unheated attic. It would often take my light a solid minute or two of flashing, flickering, etc. before it would actually warm the tube enough start to activate the gas in the light during a Wisconsin winter. So much fun.
In secondary school, we would go into the gymnasium for first period at which point they would decide to turn on the lights since there was no ambient light from outdoors (which would require windows) that is all the lighting we had and I distinctly remember it’s starting Very dim and bluish and eventually almost imperceptibly fading up to full brightness as we begin our morning. I don’t think anyone’s gonna care about this anecdote but I want to increase algorithm engagement
I personally had extreme light sensitivity as a child. Those CFL lights that started very dim were amazing for me, as it allowed my eyes to slowly adjust to the light increasing and drastically reduced the amount of paid I was in.
Ive still got light sensitivity and honestly, yea; those lights were always awesome for that feature. Nowadays i just stick to fairy lights for my lightin needs, and have sunglasses for goin out or anywhere like a store
@@spruce020If you ever need a replacement in a decade or two, a good home automation system can switch on lamps at different brightness depending on the time of day.
@@SylviaRustyFae I've been fortunate enough to have moved into several poorly lit apartments. Still, as someone who leaves the house and wears glasses, I'd kill for a good pair of transitions lenses.
@@kenshinjenna Im nearsighted but not enuf for me to decide wearin glasses is worth not wearin sunglasses (and i cant wear one over the other; even if designed for such, as is sunglasses or glasses are both a sensory bother) I needed glasses when in school tho, as i cudnt read the board unless in the first or second row, and even then with squintin heh; i dont drive tho, so that rly only ever bugs me when i go to a store i dont alrdy know what i want from that has its menu on the board Thankfully my fiancee can tell me in most those cases, cuz i aint goin somewhere new alone/without him xD
My elementary school had something similar in the HID fixtures in our Gym. When the lights were first switched on, there were these really bright halogens that would come on for about a minute while the HID lamps warmed up, and then they turned off.
I believe one of my schools had that too. It often appeared in commercial places lit by HID for safety reasons, since after a power interruption HID lights not only take a while to reach full brightness, but can take several minutes to cool down enough to be able to restart at all.
Loved the episode. As far as Farenheit and Celcius goes: it's not really easy or convenient to search this stuff on mobile. When I watch your video on a computer - sure. it doesn't take much time, but on mobile device it's a chore. Thx for the great video! PS. My favorite episode is still a video about color brown :D
Ok, I don’t know how it is on Android, but on iOS you don’t even need to open an app to convert temperatures - you can enter a temperature right in the home screen search box and it’ll give the conversion as a suggestion. Or you can say “hey siri, convert 5 degrees Fahrenheit to Celsius” and she’ll yap back the result to you.
@@tookitogodepends on the brand, but Samsung will change your app search to a google search if you do that so I guess we can? But either way I find in tech heavy videos like this where he's gonna be bringing up a bunch of temps it gets annoying after the third or fourth conversion. It's not about it being difficult, it's about breaking your attention/immersion when you suddenly get confused.
This reminds me a lot of Nernst lamps, an old type of lamp which worked in almost the same way - heater and glower - using a ceramic incandescent glower that needed to be hot to work.
For future topics if you are running low, Sulfur Lamps are an interesting concept. Almost like electrodeless fluorescent lights, but with either pure sulfur or sometimes a little bit of “dopants” to get to near perfect sunlight reproduction! I’m personally a nerd for them from an appropriate materials perspective, but I’d love to see you do a deep dive on them sometime! Granted you probably have plenty in your que as is, either way this video was great and i look forward to whatever your next one is!
@@AnotherPointOfView944 it’s when we reach 50 that we have lived long enough to reach maximal snarkitudalness. A master of snark that few in their lives will come close to achieving. It ages like fine wine or whisky. It’s at that age where the subtle nuances of ultimate snarkitude can be achieved and appreciated. A veritable DaVinci of snark he will become.
It's pretty wild to think there are people alive who may have never had to change a lightbulb. LED bulbs, even cheap ones, last so incredibly long that I cannot remember when I last had to replace a single one, and these are the 30 pack for 12 dollar bulbs. Growing up I remember at least once every 2-3 weeks an incandescent bulb would need replacing.
Interesting to see that you looked into this. I remember in your cfl video that you claimed you didn't know why enclosed cfls started so dim. I guess you learned!
CFLs were great for hard to reach places that needed a light fixture, but boy am I glad we have LED bulbs now. Those are getting better too. I never really needed this “instant bright” stopgap solution.
mixed lamps where common in other gas-discharge lamps. The incandescent part was not only used as a heater element but also to correct the light spectrum giving more warm light and red frequencies.
_My_ welcome? Whadda ya mean " _my_ welcome "? I didn't welcome anybody, I just got here! ... Oh. Never mind. I just figured out that you meant to type "You're welcome", as in "You are welcome", not "your welcome", as in "the welcome that belongs to you".
In the time it took to write this comment you could have written a API with simple components that listens for references to farenheit in playing video and order you a giant box of tissues each time it happens
22:40 Approximately 150,000 people would be interested in the celsius notation. By not doing the conversion yourself (0.2g CO2 for one google search) you just caused 30kg of CO2 emissions. (This is 66 lbs in silly numbers (see what I did there)). But I have to admit, it was an interesting video 😂
150,000 sounds like way too much. I feel like that number alone encompasses everyone who doesn't know Fahrenheit and only a small fraction will care enough to know how cold it is. Y'all could also just learn both as many of us have
@@fischer-felix well you're in luck, because it isn't inferior. Good luck. Also this is a terrible mindset to have, you should learn inferior things to understand what makes them such. For example, learn about communism and socialism to be able to compare and contrast it (or capitalism if you're someone who thinks that's inferior)
I have to be a pedant regarding your explanation of vapor pressure: in equilibrium, the liquid phase is still evaporating, but at the same time the vapor is condensing, so there is no net change. You can think of equilibrium like a game of chance where the odds are perfectly balanced, some molecules at the surface of the liquid are getting kicked out due to the random motion of atoms, and some of the molecules in the vapor just happen to bounce into the surface of the liquid just the right way to stick and become part of the liquid instead of bouncing off. When the average number of molecules / second leaving and entering the liquid are equal, you have equilibrium.
I literally just installed one of these in my kitchen 😂. Years ago, my significant other's dad gave us a bag of random bulbs for around the house, and this was the last one.
That's funny, my nightstand light (the one I switch on as I groggily roll out of bed in the morning) is a cfl like this. I always figured my eyes were adjusting to the light, not that it was actually getting brighter as it stayed on.
Told my mum yesterday that the default for car indicators in the US was to have them the colour red and in place of the brake lights when active and she didn't believe me. Thought I was making it up, it's that bonkers.
Majority of drivers here don't bother with indicators at all so it's not as big a problem as one might imagine. Or perhaps better put: "There are more significant problems."
@@hedgehog3180 It's not a solution at all. It's just a consequence of American selfishness and aggression. Signalling a lane-change more often than not will prompt people in the other lane to deliberately try to prevent you from merging. So lots of people just give up.
Must not be a thing where I live in the US then because it's still the timeless Red, White, & Orange(Yellow) like it's been since... what like the 70s?
Oh wow, I've heard fluorescent lights explained before, and the name is a giveaway, but this is the first time I realized they are basically packaging a blacklight with a coating of those glow in the dark stars you used to stick on your ceiling. I remember the 'long-lasting' CFLs in my apartment burning out all at once, soon after I moved in, requiring me to blow more money than i _had_ on replacing them with more CFLs.. i didn't bother, i got normal bulbs. my power bill barely noticed.
No joke, I love those Phillips ones with the yellow trefoil design. I''ve still got one left in service and it looks way better than many of the newer ones that I've bought since.
25:30 They also already have those heating elements for the front and rear cameras and some (though annoyingly not all) also do it for the radar and front windshield too! Thanks to the magic of modern computing, they even know when they are and aren't needed automatically too!
The effort you put into making complicated topics like thermodynamics approachable and clear does not go unnoticed. Some of the best scicomm out there, this channel.
They produced great light, they fit in light fixtures better than most CFL bulbs of the time, and they dimmed relatively well. The only really big downsides were their ridiculously short lifespan, and very high price. I had many of them, almost all burnt out now.
I loved the mention of LED car headlights. This last winter my truck really suffered from this. I actually had to stop many times over the winter to clear my headlights. So, when I bought a new truck recently I actually made sure it did not have LED headlights. I get that it is only a "sometimes" problem, but when that sometimes hits you often, you tend to stay clear of it.
I've worked at GE on the development of this bulb. Dimming of the halogen capsule instead of a sharp turn-off was actually patented by a competitor who never released a product like this. Also, this lamp has just about the smallest room for the driver electronics of all CFLs, so an actual temperature compensation simply did not fit. There existed a different version with heater wire wrapped around the CFL tube instead of the halogen capsule, providing ca. 10-second runup without the light intensity and color changes.
Would a PTC really take up more space than a capacitor? I sounds even simpler than the cap, so I guess there's a good reason you skipped it, but it seems kinda obvious, even for the time.
There you have it. A predatory patent ruins the day again
@@liryan But the patent system is so good for the bottom line of businesses... come now be reasonable, they just do not make enough money from us as it is, we have to allow them this protection XD, sigh...
One of the reasons I love this channel is for comments like this. Where else would we have an insider perspective on topics like these?
Thank you for your comment!
I was looking for the patent you mentioned as I'm always curious how companies manage to get patents on relatively simple concepts. In the process, I stumbled upon a patent from Osram Sylvania filed in 2005 for controlling, switching, and dimming a halogen bulb with a temperature compensation circuit, so it looks GE was out of luck with that idea too.
As a child I believed the slow turning on was the reason energy-saving lamps saved energy. We still have a lot CFLs in the house, because they won’t die. I was so happy, when one of the CFLs in the ceiling light in the bathroom died. I could finally install a LED bulb so the light actually turns on when pressing the switch and not five minutes later.
My parents told me that every time I complained about how shit they were. The worst part is they still have a bunch of the first generation in their house so when I go to visit in some rooms the lightswitch takes forever 🤦
Logical
My great aunt had vision problems in her house. I replaced all her lights with led last year. She can actually read her books again! CFLs are slow and full of mercury! Her electric bill is down by over half!
You can just replace them now. Its fine.
When this was an issue for me I just installed a single low-power incandescent and the rest were CFL so I would get some light immediately and then a lot of light in a few minutes
love how so much R&D was poured into fluorescent lighting only for LEDs to just immediately become the singular best lighting technology, and for old style halogens to probably stay way more common due to cars
Well, I think a lot more R&D went into LEDs. Just look at how good the ones on the market today are
@@brianfunt2619 It was enough r&d that the inventor of the blue led won a novel prize for it
Yea it’s kinda boring how often really clever engineering gets replaced by better material science,
"Singular best" is a stretch; personally I'm tired of every light source moving to LEDs, ESPECIALLY car headlights. There are trade-offs with any solution, like his "sodium lamp streetlight vs LED streetlight" video.
@@chriscluver1940 What is the matter with LED car headlights?
Yo dawg, I heard you like lightbulbs. So I put a lightbulb in your lightbulb, so you can light while you light.
Somebody had to say it.
nice april fool joke
You're the bulb now, dawg
Meme literally older than the lightbulb discussed here
@@Konarcoffee Dated! 🤣
I did the conversion of the 5°F for y'all: It's -15°C, 464° Rankine, 215.15 Kelvin, about -3°Rømer, -6.7°Newton, 180°Delisle, and -16°Réaumur
Edit: Whoopsie - 0x8badf00d caught me in a mistake; it's not 215,15 Kelvin, but 258,15 Kelvin!
+1000 for not putting a degree symbol alongside the K.
Should have had everything other than C
@@ericw.1620the rest of the world aside from the us left the chat
I expected Celsius and Kelvin my good sir but you have outdone yourself. It's been years since I ever had to convert from those strangely inverted °Delisle.
❤ i love you 💓
In the early 2000s, I swipped a CFL from a house I was leaving with 5 other tenants. It had a "globe" envelope, started very dim, and had a long warmup. The temperature was nice and low (I too am sensitive to clinically white interior illumination.) I used it as my bedside lamp for about 12 years, during which it came on in the morning when I woke up and burned all day until I went to bed. I still miss that bulb.
Referring to Wikipedia as "this website I found" gets me _every single time._ It's just perfect.
So many people have an irrational hate boner for it.
as a decade long editor there, the description pleases me immensly.
Referring to CFL bulbs as "twisty bois" is what got me. I almost spat out my drink laughing.
Hey, it might be a really useful site! ;-)
But seriously, I'm so tired of people repeating what other people say about not using Wikipedia as a resource, as if they're incapable of deciding for themselves how good the information on any particular article is, and can't actually engage with any argument based on a Wikipedia article.
@@macsnafu Wikipedia is contrary to the common buzz an excellent REsource, in spite of not being a *reliable source* in itself..
>15 years ago
>2009
What are you talking about, 2009 was like 3 years ag... oh my god
My thoughts exactly 😞😞
*crumbles to dust*
god i feel old
I recently bought a used 2018 ThinkPad,
While the math may check out I refuse to believe it was made six years ago.
I bought my first CFL bulb in 1996 which was 28 years ago 👵🏻.
Mainly because I got fed up with the tungsten ones burning out.
I have been a lighting consultant and owned my lighting supply for over 43 years and it’s been the energy laws that my state, California caused the country to eventually have to follow. In the beginning of the mandatory use of CFLs, dimming as not an option and one color temperature was how we got them. Slowly they added the colors but, as usual, each manufacturer had a different idea of what a 3000 Kelvin or a 2700 Kelvin so you could not mix manufacturer’s as you could see a color shift. We also had a lot of issues with screw in units when the socket had to be in the up position and then there were life expectancy issues when the lamp was used in an enclosed fixture and bad light output when used in exterior fixtures in cold environments. I, for 1 am glad we have moved on and we do sell an interesting LED replacement bulbs that fit the existing PL type fixtures but if you can, replace the fixture with a dedicated LED light source given that you can get more light, higher lumens per watt in a safer package and will last 35 to 50,000 hours compared to 20,000 hours and should be disposed of as hazardous waste. My 2 cents.
@@fireltd2010 I mostly agree but I prefer fixtures where you can replace the bulb. If by dedicated LED light source you mean something that has non-replaceable bulbs, I wouldn't want to have to throw away the whole fixture if/when just a bulb fails. Even though they're supposed to last 50,000 hours, they're all made in China so I wouldn't be surprised if a lot of them fail prematurely.
Alec, I recently replaced the taillights on my MK6 VW Jetta, and you'll be tickled to know I specifically bought new fixtures that have amber colored rear turn signals; thus righting a decade-long wrong.
In some Mk4 Golfs and Jettas and all Mk5 Passats I always thought it was so cool how VW made the entire lens red, yet the turn signal was amber when lit. Always impressed me!
nice april fool joke
In the part of the California vehicle code that sets basic equipment standards, amber turn signals on the rear of a vehicle are specifically forbidden. I looked it up when I was a cabbie and had come across a Crown Vic that had them, and so I wondered why all of them didn't.
Now somebody knows it's a turn signal The second it illuminates!
@@taxirob2248 Is this an odd april fools joke, or just a mistake? Takes 2 seconds to check - amber or red is allowed at rear, amber or white at the front. California Vehicle Code 24953
As a seventy-one year old, I consider myself fairly technologically intelligent. I am a retired broadcast radio engineer which had to be a jack of all trades. But I always learn something new from your videos. Keep up the good work.
High 5
You must love all these CFL and LED videos with their cheap junk (mostly) switching power supplies which create enormous RF interference. You also surely know the FCC certification on this junk is only a manufacturer statement of compliance and nothing is or ever has been actually tested by the FCC.
GE R&D was developing one with a toroid in the center and exited the gas back in 1980. I saw the prototype. It didn't go anywhere.
@@mikemandell132 In European countries we have CFLs which actually use proper EMI filters. I'm not sure about North America.
I wanted to take a moment of your time and say Thank You for all the years of informing and educating us. I have spent countless hours viewing your videos and it has impacted my life, "positively". THANK YOU.
Alec, have you considered covering ventilation as a topic? ERVs, bathroom and utility room fans vs in line duct fans, hood vents, etc? Air quality is on a lot of people's minds, and it would be cool if you covered all of the HVAC acronym!
This is also a possible side issue as talk is going around (to much consternation of the old fashioned set) about disincentivizing the gas stove due to the higher level of indoor air pollution it can generate compared to electric technologies. One obvious answer to this is better ventilation, but in order to avoid home heating energy waste needs to kick in only when needed for an operating gas stove. This should be a concern of kitchen remodelers and architects.
@@SeekingTheLoveThatGodMeans7648could you imagine using a gas stove when it’s -30 outside if it required ventilation, depending on how much fresh air we’re talking the furnace might not be able to keep up at super low temps
Furnaces typically recirculate indoor air, they don't draw from outside. On a well sealed modern house you really get very little fresh air unless you open windows. It also drags down the efficiency of bathroom and hood vent fans because they're fighting the negative pressure they create in your house.
A very good idea now when you (not Scandinavian) people start to insulate. It's unnecessary to repeat our mistakes. Good insulation must be accompanied by sufficient ventilation - otherwise poor indoor air quality and mold forming...
@@M_J_nan This is precisely the kind of thing I'd like to see Alec get into. Mainly the use of ERVs to be energy efficient while ventilating.
I'm convinced that Alec could make a 30 minute video about paint drying so interesting that I'd sit glued to my screen the entire time.
Best channel on TH-cam.
You joke but there's interesting chemistry in that - evaporation of solvents but also polymerization reactions, sometimes with the air it's exposed to, possibly enhanced by catalysts which used to be toxic heavy metals but are usually less toxic now.
Brown paint's got some super interesting properties as it dries, since it has some hue changes as the different dyes react at different times. I'd gladly watch it.
Powder coating! That might require him to seek an industrial setting, just as Destin Smarter does.
Didn't he kinda do that with the whole Christmas light painting videos?
@@charliesullivan4304 Dammit you have convinced us. We need a paint-drying video!
My dad was an energy saving nerd. We still have some early CFLs in use, but everything was replaced with LEDs when they burned out. My dad used the very blue LEDs at first, but they have all since been replaced with soft white LEDs. Much better. I won't use anything but soft white LEDs in my own apartment.
The best LED's are the ones that are glass and have a nice slight warm tone.
@@Warp2090what brand/bulb do you recommend?
@@Mase32 I've had great luck with GE
CFLs starting out dim was a huge bonus for me, when I was a teenager my mom would wake me up in the morning by just opening the door and flipping the light switch on. Great way to start your day getting blinded as someone says "time for school". After replacing the lights in my room with CFLs I no longer got blinded first thing in the morning.
I really miss the slow start up in the bathroom, like mentioned in the video. It was great to be able to see that you were peeing all over the floor in your 3 am stupor without getting blinded by a full powered light.
@@Luciano_Intorno I think it sucks that they don't really make low power leds for bathroom, no I don't want a 40W incandescent equivalent, I'd take 15W to not hurt myself. Thankfully there's a solution, battery-powered leds that are motion activated and give you just enough light and last a pretty long time.
Your descriptions are always on a new level of meta-commentary.
Only comparatively.
I am commenting on your comment about meta-commentary.
Ah - growing up in central Queensland it was rare to notice the low light output at the start for CFL's due to the ambient temps for most of the year. The lower heat output coming from the desk lamp next to you was always appreciated though. My Dad was an early adopter of these when they appeared on this side of the world. Pity LEDs took so long, it was years after I saw their power consumption comparisons on a Mythbusters episode before I could even buy one LED bulb in a specialty lighting shop over here! Oh, and I'm with you on the "thumbs down" to red turn signals cancelling the brake light. "I'm slowing down so I can turn" is clearly understandable with separate brake lights and turn signal light.
Yeah we had CFL lamps with G23 sockets in the early 90s already, and 2G11
I just want to point out that "fix[ing] the sometimes" is one of the most fundamentally satisfying things in life to me, and I wish we would focus on it more as a species
2:30
UGLY? Slander. The twisty bulbs had character and charm. Their real weakness was that I always felt like I was going to snap the things when I went to screw them in tightly.
You were screwing them in using the bulb itself instead of the base that the tubes connect to? 😮
@@orangejjay
Yeah on a NORMAL bulb it feels like a better grip and also I don't like my hand that close to the connection.
@@orangejjay In some light fixtures, that was the only possible way.
Was your fear ever warranted?
@@Blue-Maned_Hawk Between my bad memory and the fact that I haven't had to change a light bulb in ages, I can't actually remember if I ever broke one that way. I did break one of that style of bulb more recently though. ...because the lamp got knocked over.
Thank you for captioning your videos!! It allows me to enjoy your content much easier :)
Glad you changed the thumbnail to say it wasn't an april fools, genuinely wouldn't have clicked on it otherwise.
I wish I'd noticed that.
I still use CFLs in my bathroom for the very reason you mentioned. When you first turn on the light you're not blinded by bright light. It gives time for your eyes to adjust.
Dimmable LEDs are a thing. My GE Z-wave smart switches have a cool feature where if you hold the switch in the down position when the switch is off the light will come on at 1% instead of the last setting. It’s nice for those midnight runs to the kitchen.
As a nerd obsessed with plasma I will stick to my fluorescent lamps forever. LEDs are boring to me.
I have never seen a CFL take more than a second to reach full brightness. Of course, I live in Northern Australia, and have never experienced a night colder than about 6dC, so that might have something to do with it.
@@mernokimuvekPretty sure LEDs still use Plasma. Just a much smaller amount of it.
@BabyMakR My CFL's take about 5 seconds to reach full brightness even at room temperature.
One of the good things about this channel is there's no huge over-sized microphone taking up 1/3 the image, and the sound is recorded with just the right amount of natural souding room reverberation to sweeten the audio.
1:18 Not only do I remember that Philips bulb, I have one in service to this day. Sure it was a bit pricey, but it's in a location that is hard to get at. It's longevity and 'instant on' have made it's initial cost absolutely worthwhile.
My experience is pretty much the opposite, I had tons of those bulbs, but they had extremely short lifespans, way shorter than incandescent, and were ridiculously expensive. I did like the color rendering, but any hope of saving money over the long run vanished really quickly when I discovered how short their lifespan was.
I'd like to have one of those for historical purposes. I don't even like its ugly yellow beam; I just like what it meant for the lighting industry, the first LED bulb to win the L-Prize Competition. Plus, remote phosphors are really cool.
I have three of these, all still perfectly OK.
I remember the days when they cost 25x that of an incandescent but people still bought them for the energy savings
These generally tend to run pretty hot. I've had one catch fire in the last year... well producing smoke. It did not have a cover on in (upside down as an unprotected ceiling light).
As a kid I enjoyed the slow startup of the CFLs, especially in the winter mornings. My eyes had a chance to "wake up" and adjust to a brighter room more slowly.
Nice profile pic!
I personally find the instant on LEDs to be more favourable. My solution to lights being blinding is to have a weaker, easily accessible light in the room.
I agree there's a certain charm to CFLs.
I programmed my LED bedroom light to do this in the morning, precisely for that purpose😀
I use a dimmer. I turn it down as I'm winding down for bed because lower light helps me get ready to sleep and then when I wake up they are already low.
I enjoyed sitting in the bathroom doing my business when I suddenly I got this weird realization that it got brighter in the room. I loved watching our light sensing night light suddenly turn off after a minute of CFL warm up.
Seeing the "ground breaking light bulb from Phillips" brought back some serious memories, my father was an architectural advisor for a very wealthy neighborhood near me and these were all the rave. He would quite frequently take me on trips to see job sites and those boxes were everywhere! His passion turned me into an architect and I very much so remember these and feeling like they were foreign damn near alien lightbulbs when I was a kid!
“According to this web site I found”
I wonder where I could find a website like that ? It appears it could possibly be useful and one day may even be popular.
wikiledia? wikindedia? what was it again?
@@gothicfan52It’s Wikifeet, trust me.
Funny every time 😆
@@wheressteve It is hard to find these days, sometimes you have to get the 2nd page of google, past all the sponsored results.
My parents used a standard CFL in the garage forever in a cold climate, I don't know if it was in any way useful how dim in started out but I definitely got used to it and expected it growing up. I was visiting over last christmas and flipped the light on one night and about fell down the steps it was so bright, like the view from the neighbors house in Christmas Vacation. Guess that old bulb finally bit the dust and got LED'd!
😂
I tend to accidently massively overspec LEDs when replacing CFLs, I keep underestimating the effect of age and the warm up do to their brightness. You'll definately be feeling it when I LED the house, my housemates can atest to that.
I replaced a CFL with one of those 3 way aimable LED units (from MENARDS!) in our garage and it's like Daylight in there.
Did I leave the Garage door open? Nope, light's on.
I had a CFL for my garage that I bought in 2001 that served me faithfully over 4 different houses before finally failing in 2021. 20 years of service. Felt like I'd lost an old friend.
I had tubes with old fashion ballast in my garage and they were totally useless below -10c. At least, CFL would eventually come around with enough patience.
Am i the only one that likes the look of curly cfl bulbs? I wish they would make led bulbs that looked like curly cfl bulbs.
I liked the look, but they sucked in every other way. You could if you were a mad lad get a (broken?) CFL, blow,wash,suck? the phosphor out of the inside of it then string a flexible LED filament through it. You can buy them fairly cheap. You're going to want to lube the filament and the tube and use a pull string to get it in there but it'd work. Print up a new base for it or something with a power supply in it.
I absolutely loved the CFL for a bathroom lamp, it didn't blow your eyeballs out at 2am in the bathroom.
Why I just keep a fairly bright led nightlight on in there, it's like 3 watts. It's sufficient most times unless I really need the mirror for shaving.
A nightlight plugged into the outlet solves that problem too.
Then it dies after 1000 on/off cycles
@@microwaveoven2 willing to accept that, can't buy a traditional bulb anyway.
walking through the bathroom just to take a dump at the middle of the night and all of the sudden you meet the gate of heaven
Aggressive Amalgam is my favorite Math Metal band
Didn't they branch out into Chem Rock?
Very interesting and informative. The effort in making those time lapse recordings (of lamps starting in the cold) so succinct and clear to show a point is great!
Alec, your deep dives are like relaxing nerd meditation to me. ❤
I received one of those “groundbreaking” yellow Phillips LED bulbs for free from a college recruiter event back in 2012. I still use it in my reading lamp and it’s still my favorite reading light. I’ve probably gotten much more than $60 worth of use out of it! Awesome product, and outlasted a few other led bulbs I’ve bought since then.
Most older LED bulbs had much higher quality drivers. Now alot of LED bulbs are cheap plastic and the drivers ussally die after a year
The cold starts were great for a light on a wake-up timer... nice dim light that brightened over time to wake you up gently.
Feature not a bug
@@SlickBlackCadillac A bug turned feature.
I wish I could experience that
@@Tunkkisredstone be like
It's great fun when you rant!
Greetings from Sweden, the country with snow half the year, and we never have problems with snow or ice on our street lights or car headlights...
I appreciate your onslaught and fight against red rear turn signals. As a European transplant living in the US, the amber turn signal reigns supreme and is way less confusing. I say that as an owner of a Mustang, whose sequential turn signals are some of the cooler out there.
(Get it? They're LED. So cooler.)
We're different for sure. I recently drove someone from overseas and they were flabbergasted to learn that one simple green light is meant to control both through-traffic and left-turns. "How are you supposed to know if it's ok to turn?", they asked. I told them "When it looks like you won't die!"
Richard, trouble adapting may be due to what you are used to seeing. I grew up in the US and have been driving since 1971, I don't notice any difference between the amber or red turn signal, I just look for the flashing light as a notice of an impending turn.
In the US, turn signal lights didn't become a standard feature on cars until the 1950's so, as a result, when I first got my driver's license, there was a significant amount of training associated with Hand Signaled Turns.
First we need to get people to actually use their turn signals then we can worry about distinguishing blinker vs break light.
@@immabird7861 Agreed, that's a good point!
@@billharris6886I've lived in the US my entire life and have a vast preference for amber turn signals.
A flash of red prompts a bit of mental processing to determine if the car is breaking briefly, turning, or hazarding. A flash of amber means a car is turning (or hazarding).
The reverse of this was actually cited as a reason to mandate the third brake light. Since it is JUST a brake light, it is an immediate and unambiguous signal of braking.
Animated brake lights are a complicated solution to a problem that only exists because we, as a country, allow cosmetics to be more important than safety.
Speaking of General Electric, did you know that they sometimes rebranded their fuses for a client? I've been volunteering on a 117 year old museum ship, and I found a bunch of fuses in the ship's ancient fuse panel. A lot of them are General Electric branded, but I found a few which were of the exact same model, but had one of two other types of alternate branding; one was a pair of diamonds with s's inside the diamonds, while the others were branded with a simple "C.P.R." - or Canadian Pacific Railway, the ships' original owner. Neat!
I don't know if it would be worth covering for an episode, but I thought it was neat to share.
Huh, sounds like the physical object version of white labeling, which I guess probably predates the software version I'm getting familiar with at work these days.
@@gamemeister27 Physical objects definitely predate software white labeling. Lots of manufacturing companies (and chinese factories) will apply any branding you want to your order of product. This is why all these drop shipping stores are all selling the same things but with different brands. This is a very old practice.
@@gamemeister27 I've done translations for a Chinese water bottle manufacturer and they do quite a bit of white labeling alongside their OEM business. In their case, white labeled products are designed by the manufacturer and customized by the client (mainly logo adjustments and CMF options) while the OEM bottles are designed and exclusively sold by the client. They sell some of their white labeled products under a few of their own brands.
A shocking amount of water bottles come from the same few factories, I'm guessing the same goes for many other daily items. That industry also has lots of copying, the specific manufacturer I worked for seems to market themselves as NOT copying others.
On a side note, Smart Water Bottles are apparantly a thing now for whatever reason.
@@gamemeister27 I own an hardware store, and in my are is kind of the norm.
For secondary items, usually.
Like, a brand of "boutique" spanners offers hammers and tool boxes, too, to give full sets. But those low tech items are a generic hammer, painted in signature colour and branded to merge with the set.
If clients wants to have a matching color set, and pays premium for it, well...
@@mtnentertainment3454Bicycles have been like that for ages - only a few manufacturers make most bicycles in China and Taiwan (Giant is one of them, who also make their own branded bikes). They'll build to your design, or they'll do the whole design & manufacture for you. Some of them make their very high end carbon fiber and boutique steel and/or aluminum frames in the US..
And you know what gives consistent output? This channel. It's consistently amazing.
"Unenclosed CFLs work great at room temperature"
"Oh, don't tell me you're dead. Well hold on then, I gotta get a different bulb"
They work great until they don't work at all.
My father bought a couple of the non-hybrid CFLs from a shockingly high quality infomercial product. It's been like 10+ years of using them in two lamps and they both still work, nice warm light, take about 5 min to warm up.
They’re all over my house, they won’t go away, like herpes 😂
Possibly the most interesting video you've done. Had no clue about many of the things you explained, and I'm normally a very curious person. Been using mostly CFL lamps since the 1980's when the first good ones came out in Europe, which was a Philips with electronic starter, very small footprint and straight tubes, no more flickering starts as the first ones. Crazy expensive though. Was about $18 back then. Still got one from the late 80's, and it works. Have loads of Osrams from that era also from their best line, only one has died, despite being used a LOT, until LED got really good.
Lol its wild to me to hear that dope looking spiral-shaped bulb being called "ugly." Never even occurred to me that someone could have preferred the look/shape of an incandescent lightbulb. Nor did the ~1 minute to full brightness ever bother me at all.
Those funny shaped bulbs are the dopest dope I ever smoked
Why would anyone think a helix is ugly compared to an egg? And the time to full brightness, it depends on where it is. In a closet where you're just going to turn it on, grab a shirt, and turn it off? It could be pretty annoying. In almost every other location where you're going to leave it on for many minutes to hours? Why does it matter?
No offense, but 'never occurred to you someone would prefer the look/shape of an incandescent'? There's a whole trend right now of "Edison-style LEDs" that use led strips in the shape of fancy filaments to mimic the color and look of old bulbs. It's been a thing for almost a decade
Well then you're a pretty isolated special case... 😅
I don't know _why_ but I loved the clear incandescents, and the look of horribly inefficient dimmed bulbs. The helix just seemed like such a kludge. Take a hot tube, wrap it up in a sizzling hot ball, and then stick heat-sensitive components right on top of it. The engineering, I'll admit, spoiled my appreciation for them. Perhaps, had they been sculpture vs functional, I would have thought them aesthetic.@@chitlitlah
I don't mind MPH to KM conversion, as it's a pretty easy *1.6. But F to C is hard man. Please keep it up for those that watch the entire video faithfully, thanks!
My friend taught me a trick for it. Fahrenheit maps to to perceived heat as percentage. 100 Fahrenheit is 37.7 degrees or 100% hot. 59 Fahrenheit is 15 Celsius or 59% hot. 0 Fahrenheit is - 18 degrees or 100% cold. :p
@@RoryGlynn That is useless for everyone who lives in a place with different temperature ranges than that.
The ironic thing is that the Fahrenheit scale was invented to replace older temperature scales which used fractions. And now the USA is probably the only country that uses it, in the same time using fractions.
@@hedgehog3180very few people regularly experience temperatures far outside of the 0 to 100 F range
@@hedgehog3180 it's nonsense. It just sounds plausible for about 20 seconds :p
I used to work at a bank which had these extremely slow bulbs. It took about 5 minutes to get to full brightness. This video answers so many questions I had about them.
"And they did it by taking this already lightbulb in a light bulb looking light bulb and going full turducken on it by stuffing an incandescent light bulb in the middle of the fluorescent light bulb inside of the faux light bulb"
THE WAY YOU SAY THIS IS EXACTLY WHY I WATCH YOU! (and maybe for the sciency stuff too lol).
I am totally stealing the phrase "full turducken" from this video. I will have a need for that phrase some day....
@@grantstevens5 i work in hardware i bet I could find a use for it! Lol
Props for the graceful and careful way you put the old bulb down at 1:40 such that it didn't make a noise. Here's hoping you got that with very few takes! 💡😁👍
I worked at Home Depot in the electrical department from 2005-2016. I remember every single bulb you showed, and the price point of the yellow Philips LED. Customers made fun of that Yellow Philips LED price and that bulb so much!
Amalgam is a great word. Away back when if my dentist was doing a filling he would press an intercom button and say to his receptionist “prepare an amalgam please”.
the legs of his receptionist, amal?
@@shaystern2453 are you from the 1920’s? Because no one has referred to legs as gams since then. Sounds like a line from an old Hollywood movie
@@Quince828 Well, diälectal differences can be weird like that sometimes.
Ya, those amalgams ruined my teeth. Because amalgams don't stick to the thooth, the dentist has to undercut the fill spot. That means more of the tooth is ground away. Then, amalgams expand over time, like 10 years cracking the tooth. I had 8 molars done when I was 15 and in my mid 20s my teeth would hurt then i'd get a lung infection every 3 months and almost died.
@@Blue-Maned_Hawk lol yup
I never got the "CFL is ugly" thing. Then again, the amount of time I spend looking at light bulbs can be measured in the seconds putting it into the fitting, and pulling it out and throwing it in the bin.
I thought it was mostly about the light they put off. I was not as bothered by the cold, flat color fluorescents produce by default, but I can see the point. But I'm pretty sure they figured out other color temperatures eventually.
This is one of those channels one stumble upon and oh, boy, I wasn't ready for how much I would love him.
Heyyyy, I like the twisty boi look. Also there is something to be said about the engineering skill going into a device that had to twist molten glass into that spiral. Glass blowing of that level was probably incredibly expensive a few hundred years ago.
I actually like the twirly bulbs,
they always just seemed more fun to me for no reason.
They are the crazy straw of the lighting world.
Am I the only one who appreciated CFL's slow run-up to full brightness? Especially in the overhead and vanity fixtures of my bathroom. I still use CFL vanity bulbs in there as getting pelted with five 40 watt equivalent bulbs at instant max brightness was a start to my day I never asked for...
You're right. It is fast for me to ask a search engine what 10F is in C. I can do that in about 5 seconds.
But ... this video has more than 125,000 views. If 10% of the audience is in a non-Fahrenheit country, that's ~625,000 seconds spent on figuring that out. That's 173 hours spent on that. The energy usage of that alone will massively outspend what it'd take the creator to add "-12 °C" as a small piece of graphics.
Yeah! And everyone should speak the same language so we don't have to waste our time translating things!
@@porygonalbreaststhe non sequitur is strong with this one.
It's also like a midroll ad. Sure, they're quick, but they're very annoying and take away from the immersion. Also, people usually complain to express their grievances, not to get a conversion.
You mean -15c.
I always knew it was due to vapor pressure but never knew the technical background. Thank you for explaining that.
I’m glad you have a lot of time for this stuff . You give me answers I may not find on my own , you may be…..different , but all the science / electrical, and engineering types are . And I say thank you !
Growing up we had a large energy efficient bulb in our ceiling fan in our living room and one of my favorite details about Christmas was waking up having the light turn on and not being able to see the entire living room but after 5 or 10 minutes and drinking some hot chocolate, the room was bright enough to see all of the presents that were under the tree and i got more hyped.
Ah yes... mention of the LED Traffic Light "but sometimes".... takes me back to the first time we met parasocially, first Technology Connections video I ever saw.
I keep returning for the snarky entertainment but have accidentially learned a lot from these videos since then. :-)
My preference is to use both soft white and daylight bulbs. The soft white bulbs distort colors more orange while the daylight bulbs distort colors more blue. Using both seems like a good compromise.
Or just use cool white bulbs…
@@rs12official
Hmmm, let me check on that.
2700K - soft white (orange)
3000K - warm white (yellow)
4000K - cool white
5000K - daylight (blue)
4000K - 4100K is neutral white (which would be ideal)
soft white + daylight could average 3850K
warm white + daylight could be 4000k
However, many of my fixtures have 3 or 5 bulbs, so it isn't a simple average.
Checking the local Walmart, I see that they don't stock cool white bulbs (which would explain why I haven't seen them). However, they can be ordered. So, I'll give that a try in the future.
Fun fact; some CFLs would say on their packaging that using them base-up would result in a 15% reduction in brightness, likely due to the cold spot being made hotter due to convection.
Also, i believe GE wasn't the first to make such a "hybrid" CFL, I believe there was a Japanese lame manufacturer who made a similar kind of CFL back in the early to mid 2000s, but i'm not sure if they ever made it to the United States, or if they even caught on for that matter.
Yes and some used an NTC and triac to control heat up, I don't remember the company though.
@@derkeksinator17That's what I was thinking while watching, a thermistor, a specialized controller chip and a triac.
Why are you calling them lame? 😄
@@BixbyConsequence Obviously because light bulbs can't stand up on their own 😊.
I had one of the "small ring" fluorescent A19 bulbs in my room growing up ... kind of an initial try at a compact variety of fluorescent bulb. However, my room was in a basically unheated attic. It would often take my light a solid minute or two of flashing, flickering, etc. before it would actually warm the tube enough start to activate the gas in the light during a Wisconsin winter. So much fun.
In secondary school, we would go into the gymnasium for first period at which point they would decide to turn on the lights since there was no ambient light from outdoors (which would require windows) that is all the lighting we had and I distinctly remember it’s starting Very dim and bluish and eventually almost imperceptibly fading up to full brightness as we begin our morning. I don’t think anyone’s gonna care about this anecdote but I want to increase algorithm engagement
I personally had extreme light sensitivity as a child. Those CFL lights that started very dim were amazing for me, as it allowed my eyes to slowly adjust to the light increasing and drastically reduced the amount of paid I was in.
Ive still got light sensitivity and honestly, yea; those lights were always awesome for that feature. Nowadays i just stick to fairy lights for my lightin needs, and have sunglasses for goin out or anywhere like a store
That is exactly why I still have those old enclosed CFL s in my bathroom fixture. No squinting and eye pain when I get up in the middle of the night!
@@spruce020If you ever need a replacement in a decade or two, a good home automation system can switch on lamps at different brightness depending on the time of day.
@@SylviaRustyFae I've been fortunate enough to have moved into several poorly lit apartments. Still, as someone who leaves the house and wears glasses, I'd kill for a good pair of transitions lenses.
@@kenshinjenna Im nearsighted but not enuf for me to decide wearin glasses is worth not wearin sunglasses (and i cant wear one over the other; even if designed for such, as is sunglasses or glasses are both a sensory bother)
I needed glasses when in school tho, as i cudnt read the board unless in the first or second row, and even then with squintin heh; i dont drive tho, so that rly only ever bugs me when i go to a store i dont alrdy know what i want from that has its menu on the board
Thankfully my fiancee can tell me in most those cases, cuz i aint goin somewhere new alone/without him xD
My elementary school had something similar in the HID fixtures in our Gym. When the lights were first switched on, there were these really bright halogens that would come on for about a minute while the HID lamps warmed up, and then they turned off.
I believe one of my schools had that too. It often appeared in commercial places lit by HID for safety reasons, since after a power interruption HID lights not only take a while to reach full brightness, but can take several minutes to cool down enough to be able to restart at all.
Loved the episode. As far as Farenheit and Celcius goes: it's not really easy or convenient to search this stuff on mobile. When I watch your video on a computer - sure. it doesn't take much time, but on mobile device it's a chore.
Thx for the great video!
PS. My favorite episode is still a video about color brown :D
Ok, I don’t know how it is on Android, but on iOS you don’t even need to open an app to convert temperatures - you can enter a temperature right in the home screen search box and it’ll give the conversion as a suggestion. Or you can say “hey siri, convert 5 degrees Fahrenheit to Celsius” and she’ll yap back the result to you.
@@tookitogodepends on the brand, but Samsung will change your app search to a google search if you do that so I guess we can? But either way I find in tech heavy videos like this where he's gonna be bringing up a bunch of temps it gets annoying after the third or fourth conversion. It's not about it being difficult, it's about breaking your attention/immersion when you suddenly get confused.
Came for goofy light bulb, stayed for amazing science of cfl engineering!
Really neat video!
I love the lighting episodes! So much deadpan humor.
Really lights up my life
This reminds me a lot of Nernst lamps, an old type of lamp which worked in almost the same way - heater and glower - using a ceramic incandescent glower that needed to be hot to work.
For future topics if you are running low, Sulfur Lamps are an interesting concept. Almost like electrodeless fluorescent lights, but with either pure sulfur or sometimes a little bit of “dopants” to get to near perfect sunlight reproduction!
I’m personally a nerd for them from an appropriate materials perspective, but I’d love to see you do a deep dive on them sometime!
Granted you probably have plenty in your que as is, either way this video was great and i look forward to whatever your next one is!
22:46 Snark has reached critical levels. Love it!
Yeah but it's not metric snark so I dunno what he's on about
April fools!
I am here for the snark. Not disappointed.
@@mirothiel8039 He is working his way towards full Grump, probably by the time he is 50.
@@AnotherPointOfView944 it’s when we reach 50 that we have lived long enough to reach maximal snarkitudalness. A master of snark that few in their lives will come close to achieving. It ages like fine wine or whisky. It’s at that age where the subtle nuances of ultimate snarkitude can be achieved and appreciated. A veritable DaVinci of snark he will become.
It's pretty wild to think there are people alive who may have never had to change a lightbulb. LED bulbs, even cheap ones, last so incredibly long that I cannot remember when I last had to replace a single one, and these are the 30 pack for 12 dollar bulbs. Growing up I remember at least once every 2-3 weeks an incandescent bulb would need replacing.
24:18 That "But Sometimes" video is the one I found your channel through. Been hooked ever since.
Interesting to see that you looked into this. I remember in your cfl video that you claimed you didn't know why enclosed cfls started so dim. I guess you learned!
CFLs were great for hard to reach places that needed a light fixture, but boy am I glad we have LED bulbs now. Those are getting better too. I never really needed this “instant bright” stopgap solution.
mixed lamps where common in other gas-discharge lamps. The incandescent part was not only used as a heater element but also to correct the light spectrum giving more warm light and red frequencies.
There are also self-ballasted mercury vapor lamps that use the filament to ballast the arc tube.
22:50 it's -15C your welcome
_My_ welcome? Whadda ya mean " _my_ welcome "? I didn't welcome anybody, I just got here!
...
Oh. Never mind. I just figured out that you meant to type "You're welcome", as in "You are welcome", not "your welcome", as in "the welcome that belongs to you".
@@RottnRobbie excuse me what
I bought 3 of those Philips external phosphor LED "bulbs" when they came out, they really are overengineered works of art and I'm glad I have them.
I still prefer the conversion from F to C directly in the video, especially when I just listen to the audio
Might still be partially recovering from no effort november.
In the time it took to write this comment you could have written a API with simple components that listens for references to farenheit in playing video and order you a giant box of tissues each time it happens
I think he was joking
@@Konarcoffee 😂😂 I confess that this ending caught me off guard.
@@Konarcoffee IF! The person you are addressing already had the relevant skillset. Otherwise, this claim is delusional nonsense.
22:55 YOU UNDERESTIMATE MY COMPLAINING SKILLS !!!
You underestimate my intolerance for typos!
@@Elesario You underestimate my editing power!
@@343themarineComplaning?
@@Im_Just_A_Dreamer typo, I thought I had fixed before...
well, now it should be right.
On SI units - the point isn't to know what the measurement is, it's to get Americans used to using good units ;)
-15C btw
22:40 Approximately 150,000 people would be interested in the celsius notation. By not doing the conversion yourself (0.2g CO2 for one google search) you just caused 30kg of CO2 emissions. (This is 66 lbs in silly numbers (see what I did there)).
But I have to admit, it was an interesting video 😂
150,000 sounds like way too much. I feel like that number alone encompasses everyone who doesn't know Fahrenheit and only a small fraction will care enough to know how cold it is. Y'all could also just learn both as many of us have
@@ducknerWith all due respect, I won't learn an inferior system
@@fischer-felix well you're in luck, because it isn't inferior. Good luck. Also this is a terrible mindset to have, you should learn inferior things to understand what makes them such. For example, learn about communism and socialism to be able to compare and contrast it (or capitalism if you're someone who thinks that's inferior)
@@duckner well, I've learned it enough to know I don't want to learn it
@@fischer-felix sad mentality
I have to be a pedant regarding your explanation of vapor pressure: in equilibrium, the liquid phase is still evaporating, but at the same time the vapor is condensing, so there is no net change. You can think of equilibrium like a game of chance where the odds are perfectly balanced, some molecules at the surface of the liquid are getting kicked out due to the random motion of atoms, and some of the molecules in the vapor just happen to bounce into the surface of the liquid just the right way to stick and become part of the liquid instead of bouncing off. When the average number of molecules / second leaving and entering the liquid are equal, you have equilibrium.
feels like a long time since I have been that enthusiastic for a TC video ! This one's brilliant and inspiring. Great recipe overall.
I literally just installed one of these in my kitchen 😂. Years ago, my significant other's dad gave us a bag of random bulbs for around the house, and this was the last one.
That's funny, my nightstand light (the one I switch on as I groggily roll out of bed in the morning) is a cfl like this. I always figured my eyes were adjusting to the light, not that it was actually getting brighter as it stayed on.
That's one of the things I love about LED shop lights, they work in a freezing cold garage unlike CFL's.
Told my mum yesterday that the default for car indicators in the US was to have them the colour red and in place of the brake lights when active and she didn't believe me. Thought I was making it up, it's that bonkers.
Majority of drivers here don't bother with indicators at all so it's not as big a problem as one might imagine. Or perhaps better put: "There are more significant problems."
@@BixbyConsequence That's a very American “solution”.
@@hedgehog3180 It's not a solution at all. It's just a consequence of American selfishness and aggression. Signalling a lane-change more often than not will prompt people in the other lane to deliberately try to prevent you from merging. So lots of people just give up.
Must not be a thing where I live in the US then because it's still the timeless Red, White, & Orange(Yellow) like it's been since... what like the 70s?
@@Coconut-219 I think _most_ vehicles have proper turn signals, AFAIK it's mainly trucks and vans that have the shared signals.
Oh wow, I've heard fluorescent lights explained before, and the name is a giveaway, but this is the first time I realized they are basically packaging a blacklight with a coating of those glow in the dark stars you used to stick on your ceiling.
I remember the 'long-lasting' CFLs in my apartment burning out all at once, soon after I moved in, requiring me to blow more money than i _had_ on replacing them with more CFLs.. i didn't bother, i got normal bulbs. my power bill barely noticed.
"normal bulbs"😂
@@markmartindale7215 they will always be 'normal bulbs' thank you very much. just like 4:3 is standard aspect ratio.
@@KairuHakubi to you they will be and that's fine.
No joke, I love those Phillips ones with the yellow trefoil design. I''ve still got one left in service and it looks way better than many of the newer ones that I've bought since.
Wow, a TH-camr posted a not prank video on April fools, you sir get a gold star 🌟
25:30 They also already have those heating elements for the front and rear cameras and some (though annoyingly not all) also do it for the radar and front windshield too! Thanks to the magic of modern computing, they even know when they are and aren't needed automatically too!
The effort you put into making complicated topics like thermodynamics approachable and clear does not go unnoticed. Some of the best scicomm out there, this channel.
I still remember some floodlight style CFLs I had in my basement. Legit took over a minute for them to reach full brightness.
My parents had a pair of them in a exterior motion lamp for over a decade.
@@goosenotmaverick1156 They last forever, but they're the kind you don't really want to last 😂
I have one of those Phillips OG LED bulbs. They're actually fantastic, especially for the time
And... that early design somehow played *really nicely* with wall dimmers producing a REALLY-NICE dimming curve.
They produced great light, they fit in light fixtures better than most CFL bulbs of the time, and they dimmed relatively well. The only really big downsides were their ridiculously short lifespan, and very high price. I had many of them, almost all burnt out now.
I loved the mention of LED car headlights. This last winter my truck really suffered from this. I actually had to stop many times over the winter to clear my headlights. So, when I bought a new truck recently I actually made sure it did not have LED headlights. I get that it is only a "sometimes" problem, but when that sometimes hits you often, you tend to stay clear of it.
Love the pace. You’ve really got this down.
22:46 Couldn't I just ask a search engine for all the content in this video? This seems like a road you wouldn't want to send people down
Damn dude, I know a lot but I learn something every time I watch one of your videos. Nice job.
Alec 2019: "This channel prioritizes accessibility"
Alec 2024: "Be thankful I uploaded a vid and use google "