Dollar Tree $1 LEDlife 6.5 watt LED Bulb review and teardown (40 watt equiv)

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 26 вер 2015
  • See my other Dollar Tree LED bulb teardowns here:
    • Light Bulb Teardown/Re...
    @bigclive always finds cool LED bulbs at Poundland in the UK an I finally found something similar in the US at Dollartreet in Portland. A $1 light bulb which comes out to 66 pence! Whoa! Anyway, I took it apart and as you can see here it's not a piece of crap at all. A very nice 40 watt LED bulb.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 538

  • @stonent
    @stonent 7 років тому +30

    277 is a standard voltage for industrial lighting systems. It is one of the phases you can get from 480V 3 phase system.

  • @noaha8915
    @noaha8915 4 роки тому +2

    Love how excited and passionate you were about it. Also appreciate the thoroughness, thanks.

  • @johnbrandolini2915
    @johnbrandolini2915 7 років тому +29

    The circuit in the base of the bulb is a classic switching supply which is why the item will work across a broad range of input voltages. A lot of manufacturers will scrub the chip id so that their circuit can't be easily reverse engineered. I've designed enough power supplies to recognize a switcher when I see it. The power factor is high due to the inherent efficiency of a switching supply. A dimmer won't work with these bulbs because the switching supply will maintain a constant DC bias across the LEDs hence the broad range of input voltages. I wouldn't be surprised if the chip wasn't an LM2576 equivalent. Most of those regulators incorporate a soft start feature which would account for the slight delay in turn on. The LM2576 allows up to a 60v input voltage so using a simple voltage divider would be more than enough to allow operation off the mains without a step down transformer. I'm not saying it is an LM2576 since the package isn't the same but you get my drift. I am as amazed as you are at the complexity of the design given the cost of the item. The only way I can account for the cost is that a) it comes from China and b) it is overstock inventory from a chain store. Btw, thanks for saving me the trouble of taking one apart. It's been bugging me about their internal construction since they came out and it would have been just a matter of time before I took one to pieces myself.

    • @HarleyFXS
      @HarleyFXS 7 років тому +2

      I just Googled the circuit and there is no info on it, I usually find circuits this way. It's too new.

    • @fredgarvin9262
      @fredgarvin9262 6 років тому

      Power factor has nothing to do with efficiency.

    • @fredgarvin9262
      @fredgarvin9262 6 років тому

      Its an offline buck switcher.

    • @WilliamJDager
      @WilliamJDager 6 років тому +3

      John Brandolini. OORAH! Another intelligent electronics geek! I are one, too! I had no idea how many of us were out there. I know there are probably lots of us in the industrial areas and Silicon Gulch, but I've been at it for over 50 years. And ditto on the takedown. I have a few failed ones I have not yet autopsied and when I had time I was going to rip one open to see what I could find. And your assessment is dead on, I agree. As far as the dimmable ones, I have a feeling that they have something like a little 8-pin SOIC PIC micro doing its thing with PWM. They could also have something like a small ASIC which would work far faster than an inline micro with dedicated logic. So it could probably monitor the shape of the waveform looking for the classic shape of a TRIAC/DIAC waveform from a dimmer, and power down the LED's accordingly. And in China, they would be really dirt cheap chips since they would be manufacturing them in the gazillions for every other place making these bulbs. And the soft start is exactly what I thought. I have worked with much stuff using soft start for 15 KV power supplies for gas discharge lasers. Soft start is the best way to keep the LED's from getting fried with voltage spikes. BTW, I am (was) a senior electronics engineering technician. I just wish I was back on the bench again. But I am retired and where I now live, there are farmers, cows, trees, forests, hayseeds and heroin addicts (even in the mountains of north central Pennsylvania!) There is precious little high-tech development around here. We don't even have 24/7 bus service like I was used to in Philadelphia. You can contact me on Fascistbook, if you like, just use my name as you see it, or you can contact me at elektron10@verizon.net. It's nice to know I am not alone. LOL

    • @xxycom8963
      @xxycom8963 5 років тому

      John: Am I missing something? These type of switching circuits always require an inductor. I don’t see an inductor.

  • @jackmiller8275
    @jackmiller8275 8 років тому +27

    That was a very pleasant surprise seeing what was in it for $1.

  • @t4705mb6
    @t4705mb6 7 років тому +18

    The two screws holding the light guide would sell for a dollar at the Aubuchon Hardware Store here in Montpelier, VT!

    • @ProckerDark
      @ProckerDark 5 років тому +1

      lol, i bought stuff from a local store and they sell like that too, two little metal pieces for 1 dollar

  • @rogertycholiz2218
    @rogertycholiz2218 6 років тому +14

    I purchased this identical bulb (several of them) at Home depot for $7.99 each. I live here in Ontario - Canada. I ended up with
    a bill of over $90.00. Of course this included tax @ 14%.

  • @CombatDoc54
    @CombatDoc54 6 років тому +4

    Great video for being so old (LOL 3 years ago). About 5 or 6 years ago, I decided to change all of my home's light bulbs to energy saving, the coil style neon. Then the LED's came out but they were so expensive. . Then We get a Dollar Tree here in Branson, Missouri and I discovered these LED lights for 1 dollar. The one's here are actually made by Sunbeam and are 800 Lumens at 60 Wattts. The Dollar tree here is going under an expansion, so today I drove to Harrison, Arkansas to do some shopping abd stopped at their Dollar Tree and bought 6 more. It crazy that when I started this "adventure", I didn't realize it, but my house is home to 72 light bulbs, so Dollar Tree has made it much more affordable for me to transform over, plus like I said, These are Sunbeam brand and are 60W which is plenty. The ones I have states they are suitable for enclosed fixtures.

  • @CallieMasters5000
    @CallieMasters5000 7 років тому +13

    "no sales tax" was the most exciting part of this video to me!!
    I wish you had turned the bulb on again after taking off the globe, to see how it lights up.
    It makes a half-decent ping pong ball too!

    • @isettech
      @isettech 5 років тому

      They make up for it with property and income tax. They have been trying many times to add sales tax.

    • @jamesb.9155
      @jamesb.9155 4 роки тому +1

      Oh, well don't worry: We pay a whopping 9++% State Income Tax, which i don't wish on anyone. I would much rather be nickled & dimed all day on purchases than pay 9+% of my income.

  • @christophersullivan8818
    @christophersullivan8818 7 років тому +2

    They work great. I bought 40 of them at my local dollar tree two weeks ago. Replaced all the CFLs I had left. They work as well as the 8 dollar bulbs I have bought.

  • @csbruce
    @csbruce 5 років тому +2

    I bought a couple of these dollar-store Globe/Liminus bulbs recently and find them quite impressive. Most of the brand-name LED bulbs I've tried make an annoying buzzing noise, but these ones are silent. They both turn on instantly, including the Globe brand one, so I guess they've improved that since you made this video. I'll be buying these bulbs from now on.

  • @waldevv
    @waldevv 3 роки тому +3

    On some LED bulbs you can see 2 resistors connected in parallel, at least here in 230V land. On some it's hidden on the power supply which is vertical and that makes it much harder to reach, but generally if you were to remove one of the resistors it will make the LED run dimmer and cooler (since connecting 2 resistors in parallel lowers the overall resistance) which makes them last a lot longer and depending on what kind of lighting you need it might be more suitable and not too bright. I have modified a couple and while the resistor values may change slightly, with typical 6W bulbs they end up running at around 3 watts.
    The thing is that the bulbs are designed to fail, and therefore they push the LEDs to the limit so they run extremely hot and provide as much light as possible. If they made them run at a modest level then likely some people would be put off because of the dimness and they wouldn't need new bulbs because they would last forever so it would be a lose-lose situation for the manufacturer. Even if you buy the 2/3 watt bulbs they are built pretty much the same but they just have fever LEDs so they are still being basically burnt, not sure how those are constructed though but I'm loving the modified bulbs I have

  • @Da40kOrks
    @Da40kOrks 7 років тому

    I couldn't believe it when I found this at dollar tree last year (I'm also in Portland). I bought two just to try out and they are still working great. Went back the next day and they were all sold out.
    Finally came back in last week, the 60w. Dollar tree also had a package with 2 CCFL's so I bought a bunch of both.

  • @elliottmanning
    @elliottmanning 7 років тому

    After seeing how tough these LED Bulbs are in you video, found six (60watt equivalent, 120volt only) LED Bulbs at my Dollar Store. Really bright warm white lamps!!! Thanks

  • @diydaveman
    @diydaveman 7 років тому

    Very interesting to see the insides of this. Thanks for the video! I also liked the very cool sound of the bouncing bulb at the end!

  • @JamesLewis
    @JamesLewis 7 років тому +14

    The tiny delay is a really good sign, it indicates a switch mode controller bootstrap... so that's going to be far more than a capacitive dropper.... the fact that it covers US and european voltages also indicates a switch mode.

    • @ChristopherSobieniak
      @ChristopherSobieniak 7 років тому

      At least it's adaptable.

    • @WilliamJDager
      @WilliamJDager 6 років тому +1

      James Lewis, Another electronics geek! I are one, too! I completely agree with your assessment. The dimmable ones probably have a Chinese designed ASIC, something similar to an 8-pin PIC, but with the concurrent logic that can be built into ASIC'S. It would have to look at the dimmer waveform to do a relatively simple DSP and be able to respond concurrently. It would most likely use PWM to adjust the level to the LED's to lower their output.

    • @ropersonline
      @ropersonline 4 роки тому

      Are the 60Hz a maximum though or is it just 60Hz? Because if it's just 60Hz, it may not work so well in 50Hz-land.

    • @SmithKerona
      @SmithKerona 4 роки тому

      @@ropersonline The frequency doesn't matter since the AC waveform is being converted to DC by the full bridge rectifier right after the inline fuse.

  • @vladverenich4283
    @vladverenich4283 4 роки тому

    I have bought a couple at dollar tree here in Kentucky, tested them on how much power they actually use, loved it went out and bought about 45 more, replaced them all over my house, they have been working for 7 month now, never had any problems, love it and shocked at the same time, but mine was 60watt that uses 8 watts, absolutely love it.

  • @jimcameron1451
    @jimcameron1451 7 років тому

    Thanks for the tear down. I had one of these go bad and after frustrating myself trying to see inside, decided to do a search. Tough little suckers to open up.

  • @jamesb.9155
    @jamesb.9155 4 роки тому +2

    I found these Globe LEDs @ Dollar Tree stores in Portland Oregon a few years back. I put them in all around the house and not even a single one has failed. I never noticed if some say they are multi voltage. I could use them over seas! I recommended to friends who regularly travel to Mexico, which also uses 120volt AC, that they bring along a few of these for the Air B&Bs they stay in as they don't have Dollar Tree or low priced, quality LEDs like these in Mexico.

  • @NeilRoy
    @NeilRoy 6 років тому +2

    I grabbed some (not sure of the brand, but same style bulb) in Canada here, they were selling them with some coupon in the store for $1CDN with the coupon and the store had a stack of coupons you could help yourself to. I've been very pleased with these, I think all of mine were 60W. I heard from one lady that these are really good for people that are sensitive to lights that flicker like florescent bulbs. Some get migraines etc, while these I guess are a great relief, which makes sense as LED lights do not flicker. The low power usage is also not a surprise as diodes do not use much power normally, so it makes sense. All of the street lights in my city also use huge LED lights now as well.
    The conventional bulbs which I used to still use got annoying as they were blowing on me every six months it felt like. While the LEDs have not went on me yet and it's already been well over a year since I replaced them all, so already they have paid for themselves in replacement costs as well as a lower power bill.

  • @Tall_Order
    @Tall_Order 6 років тому +14

    My local Florida dollar tree just started carrying 60w LEDs. Until now that store has never carried LEDs. I was shocked! So I bought 30 of them and replaced the florescents in my house. Theres a lot less yellow in the house now, it's a lot brighter, and coupled with my white bathroom walls I should have some well lit shaves in the mornings from now on.

    • @alb12345672
      @alb12345672 6 років тому

      They are 2 for a buck here.

    • @ingebrecht
      @ingebrecht 6 років тому

      The hands down most awesome use for LED bulbs is the garage door opener. since that is an out of the way place to have to change a bulb. Also florescent do not operate in the cold as well... Be sure and dispose of your old florescent bulbs at a hazardous waste station because they contain Mercury.

    • @pavlohreyes
      @pavlohreyes 6 років тому

      LupusPurpura

    • @budblanke9688
      @budblanke9688 6 років тому +2

      Save one for giggles....25 years from now kids will marvel at them

    • @josepeixoto3384
      @josepeixoto3384 6 років тому +1

      same with fish! and us, we contain mercury too; and so does all the air that we breath; infinitesimal qty,to the point that one bulb does not matter; same as with one vote in a national election,food for thought,here,lol.
      www.state.nj.us/dep/dsr/research/mercury-bulbs.pdf

  • @palynegaenir8961
    @palynegaenir8961 4 роки тому +5

    This was interesting, thanks! I thought you were gonna measure the light output or power draw or something. I didn't expect you to defrankenstein it :-)

  • @darrellpidgeon6440
    @darrellpidgeon6440 6 років тому +7

    That was a fairly clean tear-down. The components inside are worth the dollar.

    • @Boso-ii2ef
      @Boso-ii2ef 6 років тому +1

      Darrell Pidgeon definitely, there's a ton of great deals there actually if you're into salvaging/repurposing stuff. The one near me has a pretty decent electronics section for a dollar store too. It's mostly small items that people would buy for their phones of course (like 3.5mm splitters, earbuds, 3ft usb extension cables, etc.)
      also I've been getting a few more solar garden lights each time i go lol, no hard plan for that yet other than to wire the panels in series and mount them on something once i get enough to generate something worth bothering with but it's hard to pass up a little solar cell and a 1.5v rechargeable Li Ion with battery holder for a dollar. there's so much potential in that store; between the electronics and other random things that i always seem to find there that i think i could use for a project I can't get out of dollar tree nowadays without spending like 40 bucks haha.

  • @MrBrymstond
    @MrBrymstond 6 років тому +6

    Adrian Black+ Have you thought of turning the light on for a while to heat it up and make the glue and or dome pliable enough to break loose and remove?

    • @WilliamJDager
      @WilliamJDager 6 років тому +1

      Good idea! But I would use a heat gun or a hair dryer for that purpose. Somehow, I believe that the adhesive would be formulated to be able to withstand any heat except the abnormal heat of a catastrophic failure of the circuitry by overheating.

  • @robertmclennan5310
    @robertmclennan5310 5 років тому +2

    I bought a lifetime supply for $24.00 @$1.00 each! So far I have been using the same ones for over a year, and still, burn bright!

  • @AndrewHelgeCox
    @AndrewHelgeCox Рік тому

    I loved these old bulb videos.

  • @DjResR
    @DjResR 7 років тому +1

    I have fixed quite a few bulbs similar to this, the plastic globes were sealed quite good on all 3 of the specimen I have, I also used flat head screw driver to get it open. The bulbs I got has more LED's inside, but it lacks the center reflector.

    • @williamantle5474
      @williamantle5474 7 років тому +1

      DjResR efficient? but it only helps me to defeat the power of a darkened room. far more efficient is the light of the world, Jesus Christ , who leads people out of sin death and Hell into his glorious Kingdom if they will but repent of all their sinful ways , Trust his sacrificial blood that he shed for us on the cross to pay off their sin debt to God , and to Faithfully follow him the rest of the days of their life.

    • @DjResR
      @DjResR 7 років тому

      William Antle 09867-11151-03355-1175G-11864

    • @sladelefty
      @sladelefty 7 років тому +2

      William Antle hahaha what a gullible dumb ass believing in folklore from ancient desert dwellers.

  • @ALeAnn365
    @ALeAnn365 6 років тому +1

    we get two 60 w led bulbs made by the same "globe" from dollar tree... i love them they last forever

  • @wildbilltexas
    @wildbilltexas 7 років тому

    I bought one of these out of curiously for a bed light. It works very well, the globe stays cool but the metal base with the electronics inside gets very hot. And my local dollar tree always seems to sell a lot of them.

  • @kenkobra
    @kenkobra 3 роки тому

    I watched this 5 years ago and decided to watch it again today as I have a few minutes.

  • @keninorlando9
    @keninorlando9 7 років тому

    That one is cool - with the internal refractor... The newer bulbs replace the entire power supply with just a bridge, a capacitor, and a single chip current limiter. It's only going to get cheaper and better from here on out. And, like others here, I've removed the globe to use in ceiling fans where a regular sized bulb won't fit. Thanks for the great video!

  • @sickb2200
    @sickb2200 7 років тому

    I was tired of replacing standard bulbs in my daughter's flush mount ceiling light (3 bulbs) so I bought some LEDs. They were not THAT cheap, but the box said they run very cool. No lies. Three bulbs enclosed and running beside each other creating almost no heat to the touch and much better light. Two years, so far so good. I also have 130 volt standard bulbs in some lamps that have been running for over ten years now because they don't succumb to power fluctuation.

  • @ncdave4life
    @ncdave4life 6 років тому +1

    I agree that these are very nice bulbs.
    I picked up several of the "60W equivalent" versions at my local Dollar Tree, and dropped one in checkout line. The 60W equivalent version has glass bulbs, and it shattered.
    The gal wanted to swap it for an intact one, but I went ahead and bought the broken one. It works fine, and is actually a bit brighter than the intact ones. :-)
    Dollar Tree now has 100W versions, also for $1. Even more amazingly, about a month ago I even saw two-packs of 60W bulbs for $1.

  • @frankyoung8221
    @frankyoung8221 6 років тому +1

    Awesome video! I bought 12 of these LEDs (dimmable /non-) at 99 cents store in La, Ca for only us$ 0.99 each

  • @PacoOtis
    @PacoOtis 7 років тому +3

    Interesting! Thanks for the video. We are wiser now. Off to the Dollar Tree!

    • @rick31869
      @rick31869 6 років тому

      if you want a good dose of cancer causing radiation just sit under a bunch of these

  • @chadstone1973
    @chadstone1973 6 років тому

    I'm glad to see that I'm not the only person in the world that is so easily amused with lights, especially LED's. Lol! Thanks for informative video!

    • @AlexLaw_Qld
      @AlexLaw_Qld 6 років тому

      you know about bigclivedotcom, right?

  • @tonyherring9865
    @tonyherring9865 6 років тому

    A really good tear down, tks for the info and good vid.

  • @McIntec
    @McIntec 6 років тому +13

    The amount of glue was probably like 10% the manufacturing cost... 😆

  • @gatblau1
    @gatblau1 7 років тому

    I found 100 watt equivalent LED bulbs at the 99 cent store about a year ago. They had both round and Spotlight. I have had the spot light bulb in the back yard on 24 hours a day for almost a year and it's still going strong. Luckily I bought about 10-12 of each.

  • @scaryclown34
    @scaryclown34 8 років тому +1

    i was just in dollar tree yesterday and saw the $1 led lights. i bought one to try it out and make sure they only charged me $1 at register. i screwed in the bulb shocked to find out it actually worked now i plan on buying some more ASAP. i live in NJ. I checked other dollar stores they had some leds for $3 each. so getting cheap everywhere

    • @triumphmanful
      @triumphmanful 7 років тому

      $1 stores always charge $1, $3 is not right in a dollar store. You must mean Dollar Family. Their prices are higher for certain things. I don't go there any more !

    • @WilliamJDager
      @WilliamJDager 6 років тому

      I am not so picky. I think that the merchandise at Dollar General is well worth their prices. Where I live there are Family Dollar stores and Dollar General. Neither charges $1 for everything in the store. In the true $1 stores, much of the merchandise is REALLY cheap crap. And I live on nothing but my Social Security, so I know what is cheap and good vs. cheap and bad. I would NEVER buy an FM stereo boom box from ANYBODY if it was only $1, especially if brand new. And the kitchen appliances like mixers, coffee makers, and things like that, would you take a chance that the quality would be so poor that they could only charge $1 for it that it might electrocute you or send shredded plastic into your mashed potatoes that could be swallowed by your child that would cause him or her serious injury? That is what you would get if those items were that cheap. As the old adage goes, "You get what you pay for." There is another: "Buyer beware." There is a reason why a publication like Consumer Reports exists. Some of these things are so bad that they won't even bother to review them. They figure that Americans are smart enough to avoid the worst trash out there on the market.

  • @SuoNagato
    @SuoNagato 7 років тому

    Excellent job! 👌 thanks for share.

  • @stevenA44
    @stevenA44 7 років тому

    Walmart sells their brand of these LED light bulbs, 60 watt equivalent (9 actual watts used) daylight bulbs (non dimmable) 800 lumens, last 18 years based on 3 hours per day usage. 5000 K light appearance for $0.97.. I've bought a few and they work really well. I like your video because I have a GE LED light bulb that didn't last 6 months and I was wondering how to get it apart. I am going to try and take it apart since watching your video gives me an idea of how to get it apart. Thank you for this.

  • @yasirmushtaq27
    @yasirmushtaq27 5 років тому

    Hello
    Well done nice work.
    I did the same work when I moved to my new house that was 6 year ago (2012)that time led bulbs were not cheap each bulb cast me £10 ($13) and each bulbs were producing 806 lumens if I want more lumens it was more money but I was happy with them. Since then I replaced one led bulb because it stop working I'm not complaining just telling 😁.
    To me switching on to led bulbs were best decision 💪💪 . now days led bulbs went down by $$$ 70%.
    Thanks for your video l love it and good luck.

  • @ChristopherSobieniak
    @ChristopherSobieniak 7 років тому

    I barely find anything that fancy at my Dollar Tree. Best I saw a while back was Halogen bulbs under the "Sunbeam" label, and sadly after buying one, it went out after a few days. I remember a couple years back when they had CFL's at one Dollar Tree I went to and I didn't mind getting those anyway. Mostly Dollar Tree carries those "rough surface" bulbs that skirt on by despite being sturdier incandescents (though a few burned out on me anyway pretty quickly.).
    My local Kmart had a four pack of LED bulbs (40w equivalents) for 90 cents today! They had plenty of boxes left, but no price to see so I had to check one of their price readers to find out (it was also a clearance sale of 70% off on all their bulbs in stock).

  • @fortj3
    @fortj3 6 років тому +1

    After watching this, I disassembled a Sylvania LED light bulb that had gone extremely dim.
    What I've found so far is that the negative lead had a cold solder joint at the board (popped loose with no effort) AND the power supply is putting out 83.9 VDC.
    I'm going to test out the chips with a small 12 volt power supply and see if I can use them in a project.
    I'm thinking the power supply is NG. Not sure which component is causing the high voltage output.

  • @GnomeFire
    @GnomeFire 7 років тому +3

    Great ending!

  • @robertgift
    @robertgift 7 років тому +12

    Just bought 60-Watt LED light bulbs at Wal-Mart for $3.97/box of 4. Non dimmable.
    With a hacksaw I cut off some globes and use them as excellent point light on the workbench.

    • @jhendricks203
      @jhendricks203 7 років тому +4

      The same, in addition I cut off the other end as well and connected the led
      to a 36 volt dc supply. Very bright, do not point at pets or children.

    • @robertgift
      @robertgift 7 років тому +1

      Why 36 Volts? Pure (filtered) DC so no flicker?
      I'd like to connect most house outlets on battery DC so not even slight flicker and power when power outage.
      Some outlets would need to remain 120VAC.

    • @jhendricks203
      @jhendricks203 7 років тому +1

      Re: 36 vdc, happens to be what that bulb power supply delivers, others may differ depending on the led chips used. My home made light fixtures have no space for anything other than the led panel so
      power has to be from a remote source.( Re engineered lamps.)

    • @robertgift
      @robertgift 7 років тому +1

      Yes, I like the remote power source. I want table lamps with no cords.
      An electromagnet below would power the lamp through a coil in the base. Batteries in the lamps would be a plus!

    • @logan5326
      @logan5326 7 років тому +1

      You should make a video about it and share it with the world!

  • @DutchAussieProductions
    @DutchAussieProductions 5 років тому

    Thanks Adrian. I have bulbs that look identical in Australia. If I find some more I will take one apart. I use them in my studio for fill in lights when I make my UA-cam videos. My bulbs are 10 W 220-240V. I can't remember what I paid for them.

  • @Gary.7920
    @Gary.7920 7 років тому +1

    Adrian,
    Nice video. Thanks.
    Gary

  • @Danielistheway1
    @Danielistheway1 5 років тому +1

    This one made me laugh 😂 3:30
    Hey, for One ($1 U.S. Dollar) sure is an indestructible light bulb 🤣

  • @oath1909
    @oath1909 7 років тому

    I would like to know what's the best led grow light to grow an how many watts we need to grow fast

  • @TheBlackadder-Edmund
    @TheBlackadder-Edmund 7 років тому +1

    Thanks, I think it is important to add to be careful with the "bulb" I thought they were all plastic but found once a Crystal one... I was lucky it didn't burst when squeezing (no gloves at the time)

  • @alanpowell6904
    @alanpowell6904 6 років тому

    every bulb in my house are this bulb and there great one has never burned out

  • @michaelgalarza9954
    @michaelgalarza9954 6 років тому +5

    Parts along inside the bulb is worth about $20.00 , 20 years ago 😀

  • @colfaxschuyler3675
    @colfaxschuyler3675 7 років тому

    I scrolled down to the comments as the video played out... heard the funny sound that the globe made while bouncing - had to scroll back up to figure out what was going on. Funny.

  • @4k8t
    @4k8t 3 роки тому

    I purchased Feit LED bulbs 60 watt equiv, 9.5 watt, soft white dimmables, in February 2016 and put one into service in January 2020. I used it to provide some background light for reasons and ran it typically a very long time every day (way more than 3 hours a day) and it "broke", i.e. dimmed out, in August 2020, so about 7-8 months. I bring this up to be able to relate that the bulb base, which looks just like in the video, so probably a standard look, was excruciatingly HOT. No touching it. I figure that the heat finally go to the components and/or the LEDs.
    The replacement bulb, from the same pack, showed the same characteristic - it lit up fine but also got HOT - so it appears that 9.5 watt heat dissipation for long continuous use could be better, but the set was pretty cheap and there was no way to improve heat dissipation anyway.

  • @klbird
    @klbird 7 років тому +6

    I dropped one on concrete from 8 feet up and it bounced two feet but and still worked.

    • @cameik
      @cameik 6 років тому +2

      I did the same, an oopsy from up the step ladder, with an ordinary bulb you would be running for a dustpan and broom, with this one I wanted a baseball mitt to catch it with all that crazy bouncing, and it still worked when I screwed it in! Oh, and this was a NOMA brand, bought from Canadian Tire. They had a stack at the door of these going for .99cents.. But I went to the back of the store, and found another stack of boxes of the same- 3 to a box for the same price, $.99!!!!! that makes it come out to $.33 each! I don't care about the taxes, this was an unheard of deal... Oh, and this is for a 60 watt equivalent, not 40 watt. When I dropped one, i thought I was pooched, I swear it dropped 8 feet, bounced back up about 4 feet up, and bounced all over the place for about another 20 times before finally stopping, I couldn't believe it when it lit up when I screwed it in, like nothing had happened! It's still there in my hallway, lit up like nothing happened to it, a testament to the choice of materials and construction of these new LED bulbs!

    • @samsen201
      @samsen201 6 років тому +2

      OK I get it and thanks for your tip. Once it fail to work, I'll pass it to Kids as Christmas gift to be played as ball in the field!

    • @denniss9620
      @denniss9620 5 років тому +1

      Dropping a light bulb on a concrete seldom damages the concrete.

  • @bucknaked406
    @bucknaked406 6 років тому

    Had these through out the house for 4yrs......Hold'n strong

  • @waynemiller6070
    @waynemiller6070 6 років тому

    I assumed the "instant on" meant that it becomes fully bright without having to "warm up". Those curly florescent lights start out slightly dim for a few minutes.

  • @kerryg146
    @kerryg146 4 роки тому

    Really nice job! Thanks a lot!

  • @Gromitdog1
    @Gromitdog1 6 років тому

    Any sort of thermal detection and throttling on the circuit board?

  • @mickjager5974
    @mickjager5974 5 років тому

    Wow I only just noticed them in Dollar Tree about a year ago, but definately nice bulbs so far for me. Better than some GE bulbs I got from Home Depot. I've had a couple of the 4 or 5 of them I bought go bad, I'm guessing from the power supply.

  • @davidhenderson3400
    @davidhenderson3400 5 років тому +1

    I found these at Dollar Tree about 2 years ago I guess. Anyway I switched over ever light in the hose to them. I even have spares but I may not need them. I have not had any problems at all. And you can not go wrong for $1.
    By the way the ones I got were 60 watt equivalent and 100 watt equivalent.

  • @JimN5QL
    @JimN5QL 6 років тому

    What a fantastic coefficient of restitution!

  • @IgorIglesias
    @IgorIglesias 4 роки тому

    Very good!

  • @crazycraigy01
    @crazycraigy01 5 років тому

    Works in UK too...i got two of them they run on 240v as well as 110v

  • @theyuha
    @theyuha 6 років тому

    I heard the light given off is not that good for our eyes. i guess it is the blue spectrum that can damage your eyes. Do you know about the light quality and how to buy any if it exists that are better in the quality of light given off? How would you determine the better ones/

  • @boltwevl
    @boltwevl 7 років тому

    Just out of curiosity, did you get a voltage reading on the power to the led board? I would love to be able to convert these bulbs to work off grid.

  • @chillywit
    @chillywit 4 роки тому

    Do you know what the output voltage is to the light board?

  • @classyke8603
    @classyke8603 7 років тому +1

    Very good video.

  • @elamriti
    @elamriti 7 років тому

    i need to buy new led lights any ones has a good seller on ebay thanks

  • @marryellen7713
    @marryellen7713 6 років тому

    One more question. Where did you get that power meter and how much?

  • @carlyletom301
    @carlyletom301 6 років тому

    These bulbs are good for the price. Been using them for about 2yrs now. Haven't had one konk out on me yet.

  • @slydog1080
    @slydog1080 6 років тому

    Why do they wreak havok with antenna TV channel reception ?

  • @steelhorseman6883
    @steelhorseman6883 4 роки тому

    I'm just wondering if LED bulds put our so much heat why can’t they be used in the easybake ovens? I thought they gave off no heat. I thought that was the reason they couldn’t be used in those ovens.

  • @christiangalles9563
    @christiangalles9563 4 роки тому

    Could I run the strip from a 12volt source?

  • @RealRuler2112
    @RealRuler2112 7 років тому

    So imagine somebody wanted to use a DC battery to power the bulb, what voltage should be fed to the board? And would it be acceptable to feed power directly to the LED board? (I'm thinking of making a glow-in-the-dark lure charger; flashlights work, but I can only imagine how good of a charge I would get if I were to take 2 LED boards from 800 lumen bulbs, mount them in an enclosure, and hook it up to a regular 12 volt battery with some kind of regulator on it.)

    • @TheBlackadder-Edmund
      @TheBlackadder-Edmund 7 років тому +1

      RealRuler2112 you would at least need a regulator for constant 12v dc output (eBay) as the battery will vary voltage and good dissipation (long story short constant voltage will increase the temperature). A better option is constant current but more cost and science goes into it.

  • @TheMannyAdvan
    @TheMannyAdvan 6 років тому

    The goop is actually heatsink plaster to transfer heat more efficiently to the metal heatsink.

  • @MickLBrad
    @MickLBrad 7 років тому +3

    I have a couple of these and just last night one of them went out. After cooling down it came back on only to turn off again when it reached its max temp again. At first I thought it had a thermal fuse, but after watching your video, I doubt that it does. More-than-likely, it's a defective component with a thermal breakdown. I will conduct an autopsy this weekend and relay the results here.
    BTW, the globe on the two I have appear to be thick glass when tapped with a screwdriver. Did you check the output voltage of the board? Thanks for sharing your video!
    Regards,
    Mick Bradford

    • @DarklinkXXXX
      @DarklinkXXXX 7 років тому +1

      Did you do it?

    • @kriswingert1662
      @kriswingert1662 6 років тому +3

      More than likely the capacitor is going bad. In LCD repair we call this 3 seconds to black, very common power supply failure.

    • @joeking1019
      @joeking1019 6 років тому +1

      Take off the globe top and you will probably find a burned out diode, as they're wired in series, one goes, they all go (open circuit)

    • @WilliamJDager
      @WilliamJDager 6 років тому

      Oh, yes! Hallelujah! There are more of us electronics geeks out there than I thought there were. Where I live is nothing but farmers, hayseeds and heroin addicts here in the mountains of north central Pennsylvania! Mention the word voltage and their eyes glaze over in seconds!

    • @ernestcristler8858
      @ernestcristler8858 6 років тому

      Mick Bradford o

  • @The52brandon
    @The52brandon 6 років тому

    I love Dollar Tree. I got all my cologne there. It may not last as long as the $80 authentic, but after losing about a grand worth of cologne, I'll go ahead and spray every hour instead of every 5. Light bulbs specifically though, Fry's Electronics has em for like $0.50 now often

  • @lydiaerrera4259
    @lydiaerrera4259 6 років тому

    I just bought a Wein ionizer and I broke the antenna out of place. I opened it up and the antenna is not connected to anything. Please help me. You are so smart. Everyone wants me to throw it away. I want the vortex effect to work again. WeIN V-I 2500-N workThank you Lydia

  • @nerys71
    @nerys71 7 років тому +2

    instant on refers to warm up time ie like old cfl's ie when these turn on its full bright immediately.
    its also not a dollar. its subsidised by the local power companies so the price is temporary.

    • @tty23
      @tty23 7 років тому

      no it is a dollar, .... The prices of LED bulbs are around 1-3 dollars here, before dollar tree got them I had begun replacing my bulbs over the course of 3 months, the first set of bulbs were about 6-8 dollars, which was low considering I hadn't followed the prices since their introduction. The last sets were from the dollar store, with afew intermediary prices in between, and I don't see many 6-8 dollar bulbs anymore unless they're special.

    • @nerys71
      @nerys71 7 років тому

      tty23 no. its not. $1 subsidized is not the same thing as $1 unsubsidized. of course i bought a crap ton of them anyway subsidized or not. they are too warm and not very efficient but indont care for $1 especially if you nab the dimmable ones. sadly theur current batch is non dimming and even less efficient. i prefer 4watt bulbs. i simply gang them up and then dim them down.

  • @taz104
    @taz104 7 років тому

    I would have liked to see how bright it was after you removed the light inhibiting globe. Thumbs up for the vid.

  • @UNOwen1
    @UNOwen1 7 років тому

    +Adrian Black:
    That it's $1 IS pretty amazing. It really wasn't that long ago, when they were VERY expensive. And as we know, the price WILL (CONTINUE to) drop, even further, over time.
    The delay is so iirelevant, that - for what these bulbs save one in usage cost, it's still a great buy. The only thing which would mean anything to me, is the light's colour quality. I prefer the ones which are as close to full spectrum as possible, but, for a general-purpose LED bulb, this ia great one.
    Liked watching this - the durability of this bulb's AMAZING. I'd really like to get a tube of the glue the manufacturer uses to seal the globe on - WOW!
    Always find these 'inner-working' videos interesting.
    Thank you, Mr. Black.

  • @EricAdamsonMI
    @EricAdamsonMI 6 років тому

    In Michigan, we similarly have $1 LED bulbs at Dollar Tree. My understanding is that these bulbs are subsidized by the local utility companies as part of various green initiatives, which (for Michiganders, at least) accounts for the amazing price/quality disparity. That bulb definitely cost more than a dollar -- the customer just didn't have to pay full fare.

  • @5argetech56
    @5argetech56 7 років тому

    I think the instant on feature refers to instant brightness as compared to a CFL bulb.

  • @CMEFLIP
    @CMEFLIP 4 роки тому

    That is a RESISTOR, NOT A FUSE on the "hot" line of the input voltage (20 Ohms on the bulbs I have). Does anyone know why it is there? Possibly for 3-way switches being able to completely shut the bulb off?

  • @jedimormon7138
    @jedimormon7138 7 років тому

    postage is going to cost more to return. Just bought couple for the garage area Walmart ones. Impressed with LED! Hated floresent offerings. What do you recommend for recessed lights in 65 w

  • @karzygijose
    @karzygijose 8 років тому +13

    my dollar tree is slacking :/ only have the old incandescent lights

    • @cup_and_cone
      @cup_and_cone 7 років тому

      karzygijose same

    • @cup_and_cone
      @cup_and_cone 7 років тому +2

      NASA Staged Events I've been to three different dollar stores since I've seen this video, and none of the workers had even seen an LED bulb through the doors. It seems to be a very regional item.

    • @Elhardt
      @Elhardt 7 років тому +2

      +thechosendude The Dollar Trees near me (Cary, NC) have two different 60W LED bulbs by different manufacturers ($1 each). One claimed to be dimmable and was 3000K color temp, while the other didn't say it could be dimmed and was 2700K. I noticed that the dimmable one seemed to be considerably lighter in weight which made me question its quality. I was just in Home Depot on Saturday (day after Black Friday) and they had 4-packs of Ecosmart 60W LED bulbs for $5 (normal price about $16), so about $1.25 a bulb. There was a sticker that said Duke Energy next to them, so it may be subsidized by the electric company out here as happens periodically. It's how I've gotten CFL bulbs dirt cheap. You might want to check your local Home Depot, Lowes Hardware, or big membership warehouse store if you belong to one, because sometimes they get marked down big time now and then because of those power company subsidies.

    • @cup_and_cone
      @cup_and_cone 7 років тому +2

      Elhardt Lowes had LED 60w equivalent bulbs (Utilitec) for $0.88 on Black Friday. They have bad reviews, though. Really bad. I have been buying the Great Value 40 and 60 watt equivalent LEDs. They're under $2 these days and designed by TCP, and have a easy warranty exchange (but haven't needed it yet).

    • @MultiTeebag
      @MultiTeebag 7 років тому +8

      My dollar tree hid them under the old incandescent lights lol

  • @edinfific2576
    @edinfific2576 6 років тому

    That is a VERY good, if not GREAT, find!
    I have opened a few LED bulbs, and that one is so far THE ONLY ONE that uses film capacitors at input, which means they will not dry up over time and lose capacitance like the electrolytic ones. The power supply unit is a pretty good quality, the casing is solid and uses aluminum heat-sink, apparently sufficient number of LEDs, IF they're rated at 1W each, but chances are it's less and they're over-driven.
    It would be nice if they were 4000K (neutral white).
    P.S.: It's not hard to open them with a kitchen knife, just cut the silicon glue by spinning the bulb with your hand while laying it on a carpeted floor. Relatively safe and easy.

  • @davidjames9935
    @davidjames9935 7 років тому +2

    What would happen if you put 240VAC thru it? What then happens to the actual wattage? How does this device handle multi-voltages?

    • @lsxblazer2548
      @lsxblazer2548 7 років тому +1

      some cellphone chargers all so use several voltage they have a self power regulator inside which converts 120-240v AC into problably 6-24v DC depending how much it takes to power up the leds

    • @rick31869
      @rick31869 6 років тому

      you get twice the radiation

    • @WilliamJDager
      @WilliamJDager 6 років тому +1

      WHAT radiation?!? LED's ONLY output a narrow band of colors across their optimized color. The white ones are a high bandwidth that allows ONLY visible light out. The voltages involved are not high enough to force electrons into a high enough energy level that they radiate out as radiation. This can ONLY happen when you have in excess of tens of thousands of volts to cause high-energy electrons to be knocked off of a target, like an X-ray machine or an older television with their 25,000 plus volts to the picture tubes. Even 3-phase 480 volts could not produce "radiation" beyond the magnetic fields surrounding the conductors, which is harmless. Even the power lines that run at about 1200 volts could not do it, even when you have high humidity at night and you see a blue glow around the wires, which is nothing but the high-voltage AC slightly ionizing the surrounding atmosphere because of the moisture causing some conduction through the air. Those are harmless as well, because of something called the inverse squares law. Here is where you can learn more about it: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverse-square_law

    • @samsen201
      @samsen201 6 років тому

      You saw the the description on the lamp (@ 06:25) and circuit. They are made to run normally on any power supply from 120-277 Volt. So no problem to work in USA or Europe.

  • @capiberra4118
    @capiberra4118 3 роки тому +1

    I think you owe BigClive an apology.

  • @melodyze6247
    @melodyze6247 6 років тому

    do you know if these would be able to be turned on using a 12v power source from a molux connector in a PC? they look bright enough, and fora dollar... dang! thats cheap

  • @tablatronix
    @tablatronix 6 років тому

    You never plugged it in to see the color temp ?

  • @johnny6148
    @johnny6148 6 років тому

    how's the blue light in your home?

  • @SDWNJ
    @SDWNJ 2 роки тому

    It’s possible that Dollar Tree got them as part of some type of close out deal where some company was just trying to get rid of them at or below cost.

  • @JessicaFEREM
    @JessicaFEREM 3 роки тому +1

    ngl i thought this was a vwestlife video for a sec, the table, and the fect that you're reviewing a lightbulb

  • @marryellen7713
    @marryellen7713 6 років тому

    My big question is, What is the transformer doing. From his description the fullwave bridge is right at the power source. that puts the transformer receiving D.C.. LEDs do not need a ballast. 110 V to 1.5V is a huge power drop.
    I have been replacing my 1 and 2 tube Florescents with 12 foot LED ribbons. I use a 12V power supplies I have from toy chargers. I started doing this when the Florescents start flickering at start up.
    I got a lot more light and more coverage.

    • @kennethflorek8532
      @kennethflorek8532 6 років тому +1

      What is the transformer doing? It is the inductor for a switching power supply. You are right that pure DC to a an inductor doesn't make sense, but if you pulse the DC you get a type of switching power supply. Why use a transformer instead of a plain inductor? If you check out the bigclive youtubes, he back engineers the circuit to a schematic at times (which this channel did not do) and says a bit about why they do things the way the do. Full wave rectification, unfiltered, appears as partly DC and partly as AC to an inductor.
      The LED chips are generally all in series, and, although the chips are multiple light emitting diodes (to get more light), white LED chips drop about 3 V, the same as one white LED.

  • @CurmudgeonExtraordinaire
    @CurmudgeonExtraordinaire 4 роки тому

    They figure they are safe giving a warranty on them since no one will make a claim on the warranty. By the time the light dies in a couple of years, the people will not have their receipt, they won't remember where they bought them, or they will realize that it costs more to ship the defective bulb back than it would cost to just buy a new one. I just replaced a LED bulb in my garage after only 2 years. I had bought it at Fry's, but there's no way that I have a receipt from that long ago. I decided to disassemble it and had as much fun as you apparently did. I was beating on it with a pair of side-cutter and it would *slightly* crumple, but not break. Eventually, I got a hole in it and used the side cutters to slowly snip away the translucent globe. After disassembly the rest of it, I see where apparently a resistor had burnt up, so for a few cents, it might have been possible to repair it, but there is no way to "disassemble" the bulb -- you can *tear it apart*, but that is about it. I also tried using a heat gun in the hope that the adhesive would soften enough for me to remove the globe. I managed to deform the globe, but it still was very well attached. After "disassembly", I salvaged it for parts that I might could use in other projects in the future. I haven't figured out what voltage the COB LEDs are using yet. I've tried from 9V up to 24V, but have not even gotten a dim glow from the LEDs.
    I have a couple more of these LED bulbs that have died and I will be "disassembling" them also, but I need a more elegant solution than just "beating it to death with a blunt object"... :) I'm thinking that I'll just chuck it up in my lathe and cut a groove at the base of the globe to remove it.

  • @mwood65
    @mwood65 7 років тому

    I have a 100W and it's cool to the touch.

  • @MrRyanMacatee
    @MrRyanMacatee 6 років тому

    I BOUGHT A BUNCH OF THESE FOR MY HOUSE CONVERTING ALL MY BULBS TO LED BEFORE SEEING THIS VIDEO THEY ARE NICE LIGHTS AND USE A LOT LESS ELECTRICITY AND IS MUCH CHEAPER THEN ANY OTHER STORE AND SEEMINGLY BETTER MADE THEY ARE A GOOD BUY