Thanks for the teardown, it's amazing they're probably running 265v across 3.1v LEDs by lining up like 80 of them. Seems pretty economical as long as the voltage boosting circuit isn't too costly. Something to think about.
Ah, I wanted a teardown of the second type of bulb. Also you said it was fine for outdoors, but that seems odd because the passivation stops at the last 1/5 of the circuit board and of course that would weather badly (but perhaps not shock humans!) I have a C21BB-QE26-10W-27/65-80-W that lasted not long at all as a bare downlight in the garage and I want to restore it natch, but it is built like a smol rhinoceros with a bit of jiggle but not looking super shimmable. At all. Do I send it to Lockpicking Lawyer with some pricey drink?
I love your reviews but I really wish you would add temperature data in for your bulb reviews. I am aware that ceramic is a better at dissipating heat than the aluminum based LEDs but I have seen differences as much as 10 degrees Celsius on regular 60W equivalemts, for safety reasons I hope you could start adding temperatures for these bulbs vs others because I see people bashing these bulbs because they do not have any certification but on the surface they look superior to bulbs made by GE and others but would love to see some kind of comparison given the impact of heat on LED brightness and life over time. Thanks for a great vid.
If you twisted the 150W that is not as bright off then showed us the 250 on would be a good review. Having them both on shows us Jack chit lol. But when you put them in a lamp one at a time. Of course you can see double the brightness only when I have your video up on two separate pages. Or stare at the lampshade tells you. Thanks for the review.
Thanks for the teardown, it's amazing they're probably running 265v across 3.1v LEDs by lining up like 80 of them. Seems pretty economical as long as the voltage boosting circuit isn't too costly. Something to think about.
Thank you for the teardown of the bulb. It help me to fixed it.
Just got one of the 2500lumen versions. These are still built like tanks.
Ah, I wanted a teardown of the second type of bulb. Also you said it was fine for outdoors, but that seems odd because the passivation stops at the last 1/5 of the circuit board and of course that would weather badly (but perhaps not shock humans!) I have a C21BB-QE26-10W-27/65-80-W that lasted not long at all as a bare downlight in the garage and I want to restore it natch, but it is built like a smol rhinoceros with a bit of jiggle but not looking super shimmable. At all. Do I send it to Lockpicking Lawyer with some pricey drink?
I love your reviews but I really wish you would add temperature data in for your bulb reviews. I am aware that ceramic is a better at dissipating heat than the aluminum based LEDs but I have seen differences as much as 10 degrees Celsius on regular 60W equivalemts, for safety reasons I hope you could start adding temperatures for these bulbs vs others because I see people bashing these bulbs because they do not have any certification but on the surface they look superior to bulbs made by GE and others but would love to see some kind of comparison given the impact of heat on LED brightness and life over time. Thanks for a great vid.
Nice video
I was thinking about these for my home office but I have recessed ceiling lights with a covered fixture and I was told not to use these in there.
great stuff
If you twisted the 150W that is not as bright off then showed us the 250 on would be a good review. Having them both on shows us Jack chit lol. But when you put them in a lamp one at a time. Of course you can see double the brightness only when I have your video up on two separate pages. Or stare at the lampshade tells you. Thanks for the review.
They look same. Dont worries buddy buy any1 which is cheap and put it in socket.
Man I bet that thing pumps out the heat (but I guess so would a 250 watt incandescent)
Not as much as you would expect, it does get pretty warm after a while, but nowhere near the dissapated heat of an incandescent light.
You get what you pay for is a flawed phrase. Often it’s not true.
John Howard A lot of times it is