Do you ever wonder which light technology is best for consumers? Wonder no more because the future is bright! Get it?! BRIGHT!
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My References:
President's Speech From Sep 2019: https://youtu.be/K_iFi1qH8Cg
Light Color Temperature: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Color_temperature
New LED Phosphor, Light Research Center: https://www.lrc.rpi.edu/programs/nlpip/lightinganswers/led/whiteLight.asp
On touching the Halogen Light: https://www.lightingcompany.co.uk/is-it-true-you-should-not-touch-halogen-capsule-bulbs-with-your-fingers-i98
A Report on Cold Street Lights resulting in low visibility: https://youtu.be/jPH1Z6B2oUc
By: Mehdi Sadaghdar
#LightTechnology

Hi I have a beef with President Trump. He made an announcement a while back and no no. This is not a political video, I'm not a politician and know nothing of a subject. But what can I say? I'm a simple man.

I see someone talk about electronics and I have to rectify it now to keep it simple. He expressed his dislike of the new power efficient light bulbs and announced his new government support of the old incandescent light bulbs to increase their production. He provided a few reasons such as people should watch with a light bulb. I said history, the lights, no good.

I always look orange, which is, of course true, because when the white light hits a surface, the surface absorbs many of the wavelengths and only reflects a few, which is why we see the surface in a particular color, and so because he's orange he looks orange. This is not a political video, I'm just stating facts and science. I thought he was joking at the beginning, but then he completed himself by saying I always look orange and show to you. The light is the worst.

Ok, then that's a different claim, although if everyone looks different, then no one looks different, so that's not a real problem. Then he made another complaint about the lights, but number two, it's many times more expensive than that all incandescent bulb. They have warnings if it breaks. It's considered a hazardous waste site, its gases inside which made me realize he's talking about CFL or compact fluorescent lights.

Frankly, I don't like those lights either, so there is truth to his claims and you're kind of in the same boat. This is not a political video. It's not about if I dislike the President or not like him, but you know how it goes. You mentioned Trump and the whole world blows over.

That's why this video is only sponsored by my patrons at patreon.com, although I may lose a bunch of them now, because of this I shouldn't be afraid to talk about science. It's just about science, so spasm like now, if you agree spasm, is that how people, like my videos, by involuntary muscle, twitch, you think the only difference between light bulbs is light, color and efficiency. I created a table of many different parameters and I'll score. Every lightbulb to see which one gives the best user experience.

There are four different major types of light to check. First, one is the classic incandescent light. There is a thin tungsten wire in there that heats up with electricity and glows. The bulb is filled with nitrogen or argon gas.

Pretty harmless. You almost can't buy these in Canada anymore. Good second type is halogen. Its structure is very similar to incandescent, just that it's filled with halogen gas, which makes it run brighter.

So it's over 30 % more efficient than incandescent, they are typically made as spotlights, but they also make them in these regular shapes too. Let me show you how see this they actually put a smaller halogen bulb in a bigger glass to make it look normal. Next. Is CFL or compact fluorescent light? You have seen these big fluorescent lights in offices.
They figured out a way to spin them into this compact form. There is mercury inside the glass that vaporizes and glows bright under high voltage. Mercury vapour under high voltage generates tons of ultraviolet light inside the glass is coated with phosphor that absorbs most of the UV light and glows in visible spectrum. I'm not a fan of CFL light same as my comrade, president Truong just joking and then there's the LED lights made of a bunch of tiny light-emitting diodes made of silicon that glow.

These are the latest technology. My favorite and our markets are flooded with these good. Now all these can shine with different colors, sometimes assisted by painting the glass and sometimes by different glowing material, but for CFL and LED lights that make regular white lights used at home. They can come in a wide temperature range of white.

The typical range is from 2700 Kelvin to over 6000 K, with 2700 K, being the warmest with most reddish tones same as incandescent or halogen to 6000 caving. The coldest with most bluish tone used by more Moochie reason cycles enough talking. Let's talk some more and fill the table with the properties of my lights. All these lights output, a level equivalent to a 60 watt incandescent bulb power.

Usage is simple. I just write it from their boxes. Incandescent is 60 watts. Obviously, halogen is 43 watts.

Cfl is 13 Watts and LEDs 8.8 watts. This is a bad parameter, then less is better. So I call it b1 light level for a 60 watt. Incandescent can be as high as 800 lumens, but it's typically 700 or less lumens is the unit of luminous flux or the total amount of light emitted by a lamp.

For this halogen is 750 for my CFL 850 and for my LED is 800 lumens. It's a good property, the higher the better. So I call it g1 length of life for incandescent is a typical 2,000 hours for halogen. It's half that for my CFL it's 10,000 hours and for LED is 15,000 hours.

Light quality, in my opinion, is about what the light is made of as in the spectrum, and for that we need to do some testing, so I got my hands on a special license or thanks to my friend Steve, who helped me borrow it in other news. He actually has a neck. You know how digital cameras have 24 million pixels. This one is a single pixel, but it's a special pixel.

You know. Digital cameras can only see you red, green and blue, but this one sees every single color of the spectrum. So using this we can see what every light is made of. You might be surprised to know that, even if the light color is the same, it might be made of different light components.

So this is what we get. We have a chart. That's light intensity versus wavelength, we get a little bit of UV light and then the visible range and then the rest is infrared first, let me see if I can measure the sunlight. I have to turn off all my lights here we go, although it's a bit cloudy today, so it might be on the colder side, and you see it's not very smooth it's because the gases in the atmosphere absorb different frequencies of light and create notches in the Wavelength - and maybe I should stick it outside the window, because the glass itself filters the infrared light it's a cloudy day anyway.
So there is not much infrared out in out in out it's interesting that the white light doesn't have a flat spectrum at all. Now, let's try my four light bulbs, starting with the incandescent light. As my baseline, this is my favorite light color, it's warm and nice, and here it is tons of infrared light, but a very smooth peak that covers the entire spectrum Sun lamps, on lamps on lamp. So it's wasting a ton of energy radiating in infrared because we can see it anyway.

It might be just helping bees and snakes. Next light is halogen bulb and here's their spectrum very similar to the incandescent light, bulb a very smooth peak nice and warm and has tons of infrared. Although the color feels a little bit colder incandescent incandescent halogen incandescent, now to my least favorite light bulbs CFL, although they did try to match the warmness to the incandescent light bulb, and here it is whoo. Oh, my god, spikes spikes everywhere.

There is even a large spike in the UV region: let's lower them, there you go so the white light is made of three spikes. Three major spikes in red, green and blue regions and the red spike is quite orange. Maybe our little orange guy wasn't wrong. After all, of course, the CFL has a warm light.

I assume in colder ones. The blue spike is much larger and so the spike in the UV light. That's why I say CFL has my least favorite light quality, because it's made of spikes. Like I said, every surface absorbs a bunch of wavelengths and only reflects a few, and that makes the color of the surface.

So if a surface reflects a certain wavelength that falls between these spikes, it could appear too dark, although it is not dark or if it matches these spikes, it could appear too bright. So although the CFL light has many spikes, it may not light up the environment uniformly and it also radiates low levels of UV light. That's known not to be great for health and now the LED lights. First, let's try the cold 500 K LED here.

We are no spikes in the UV region, expected spikes in blue a much wider one in green and red region and then unexpected red spikes. What are they using red LED lights? Let's try. The warmer 2700 K LED Wow, much smaller blue spike, but huge red spikes. Let me just check a cold single, LED light and see what it looks like there you go.

This is what I expected: no red spikes. These people might be using red LEDs to adjust their tone, see the way white LEDs work is that they are actually made of blue LEDs and, like CFL, are coated with a phosphor layer. The blue light goes through and some of it is absorbed by the fluorescent layer that glows in red and green spectrum. It is not as a spiky as CFL light and creates close to no UV light.
Let's try the IKEA warm lights. There you go. This is what I expected a nice and smooth peak covering the entire spectrum, except for the blue spike. That is why is philips using red LEDs.

I hate spikes. Oh just saw a report from the lighting Research Center of RPI, stating that new phosphors are being developed to improve color, rendering hmm, so they intentionally added a red spike. To make the light look better and philips is the newer technology. I still hate spikes and think I hear of Sweden need a better job of emulating and incandescent light connection IKEA clips, Philips psyche, Afghanistan, okay, let's continue with the table for light quality.

Incandescent is a 1, as the baseline halogen is very similar and is a 1 CFL has a very spiky spectrum and radiates low levels of UV that can irritate your skin. If you see too close, have sensitive skin or have a high UV level amp. Although newer technology can improve it, but we still saw UV on this one, so I give it half a score. Leds spectrum can be very similar to incandescent, but it can still be spiky.

So I give it a point. 9 for durability. You drop incandescent, CFL or halogen, they can break and die, but halogen is specially more sensitive halogen light. Capsule is made of quartz rather than ordinary glass to be able to handle higher temperatures touching it with your salty.

Only fingers will significantly weakened it led. On the other hand, the cover is made of plastic. It doesn't matter if it breaks as long as the electronics is not broken, it runs, so it's like 10 times better. So if incandescent is one halogen is 0.75, especially for those that you can actually touch the quartz.

You just have to be careful not to shake or touch it. Cfl is also a 1 and it is much stronger, but it's not that big of a deal you just have to be more careful with the other ones. So I give it one and a half cost-wise. I was surprised that the incandescent is around two dollars now used to be around loonie a maybe it's because they don't sell them much anymore.

Good two and a half dollar for halogen $ 4 for CFL and LED is getting much cheaper around three and a half dollars for the dimmable option: a dollar thirty cents at IKEA for non-dimmable option, Sweden for light temperature, incandescent and halogen are both around the same. So one CFL and LED have a much larger range to choose from, but who cares? Warm is the best option unless your cycle and don't forget blue light can create excessive glare and flare in human eye compared to red light, especially dark at night. When the eye pupil is wide open and can make it hard to see details so go on or go home, it's good to have options. But to me it's not a big deal.
I go straight for warm, so I give them one point. Two. Four D: mobility. Both incandescent and halogen or dimmable, but CFL, is not.

Let's say: 20 % of the lights at home need to be dimmable and CFL can be used on the rest. So I lower its score. 2.8 LED can be dimmable, but the price doubles. So I give it a point: 9 hazardous material is bad, so higher score is wars.

Both incandescent and halogen are made of class and inert gases. Glass breaks. It can cut your finger, so I give them both one CFL. You can also cut your finger with glass, but it's also made of the poisonous mercury.

So it's worse, and I give it a one point: three LED. I guess you can cut your finger with plastic. It's better, but I'll give it a point 9 good. Now that our table is filled all normalized numbers by dividing every row by the value of the incandescent light for that role - and this is the normalized table - now calculate a consumer experience factor which I set it to be equal to the multiple of all the good Parameters divided by all the bad parameters, and so incandescent gets a 1.

As expected, halogen gets a measly point. 45. All parameters considered it's only less than half as good as incandescent, but CFL with all its imperfections is still five times better than incandescent still a winner, but LED is 54 times better than incandescent ten times better than CFL forget about halogen LED is clearly way ahead Of everything else for consumers, nothing even comes close to LED lights. This is what everyone should be using so back to our neighboring president.

He is clearly talking about CFL lights, being bad with their poisonous gases and funky light spectrum, but not only CFL is still much better for consumers than the incandescent. We are well past that, in the LED era, not only switching back to incandescent is terrible for the environment because of much larger waste of energy. It's 54 times worse than LED for the consumers. I'm sure there are tons of other world leaders making terrible environmental decisions, but if you have learned anything from the current pandemic is that our actions don't just affect us, but each other.

Everyone in the world should say no to excessive, inefficient power consumption. It's the scientific, common-sense to save the planet, so use LEDs. Please choose wisely. For me, this is not a political video.


12 thoughts on “Presidential BEEF, Difference of Light Technology”
  1. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Roman W says:

    I disagree – you do not need any dimmable lights. I literally do not have any dimmable lights in my home.

  2. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars oldolf mann says:

    I may be wrong, but I am pretty sure there are trillions of light bulbs all over this planet and you could take every incandescant bulb there is, throw them on the ground, crush them, and they would just turn back into harmless sand and dust. Please don't try that with LED's or any other bulb.

  3. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Rytis Lun says:

    I know its an old video but try to look to LED through high FPS camera and you will see that it flickers you wont notice it but it kinda kills your eyes so idk

  4. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars LoekiNL says:

    To be honest, As a Hamradio operator, I love incandescent and halogen lights… no RF noise.. but for all other reasons, yes, LED!

  5. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars cyalknight says:

    For incandescent, that is what many people are familiar with and for some it is hard to switch. CFL's are more energy efficient and last longer, but has some issues. LED can sometimes be more expensive, but they are the most energy efficient and last even longer with just some lighting color issues. I like the LED bulbs best.

  6. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Paul Kohl says:

    Me too!!! I can't get enough of your YouTube videos – hilarious. I truly enjoy the educational aspect as well.

  7. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars CK's channel. says:

    Way back when, like 20-ish years ago, I was way excited to hear about LED lightbulbs coming into development….

    But it wasn't the environmental factors that excited me… Sure, they're great, but there was SOOO much more, too!!

    It was the fact that one little teeny object could do the job of many big, bulky, very fragile objects, and could do even more than that! By FAR!! Literally a square inch of high-output LEDs can do the job of an entire array of big Halogen lights!!

    It was the fact that LED's burn way less electricity, meaning a way lower power bill. Their efficiency compared to incandescent is amazing in its own right!

    AND the fact that they're tuneable! Literally just by messing with an RGB panel and different voltages, you can mix the output into any color light you want! Your one light device could go literally all the way across the visible light spectrum and back again with just a throw of a slider or a turn of a dial…

    In fact, recent adaptations of this technology, coupled with software, have proven to be amazing horticulture and botany tools!! Plants can be grown indoors under a lighting system that can literally mimic the sun in every way, to include seasonally and environmentally!! You can literally program these lights to move across a fixture, to change its spectrum mimicking a growing season (iirc, warmer in the spring, cooler in the fall), and it can do it ALL for a fraction of the cost of previous technologies, and an even smaller fraction of the fire, electrical, and etc. hazards to boot!! We could quite literally grow tomatoes on the moon or mars if we so felt like it.

    Shit, I got a night-light in my bathroom that dims and brightens as needed with the help of just a photoresistor… Coolest damn thing ever, and it keeps my bathroom most definitely bright enough to accurately pee at 2am without turning on the big light and slamming your face into the photons…

    Science f'ing rocks. <3

  8. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Dalton says:

    I actually like incandescent and some halogens. I like them because they're not efficient… sounds backwards? I'm in a dark and cold basement. During the day my solar panels are my power cheap. Therefore cost to run a single set of lights is not a big deal during the day… but my basement is super cold so the radiant heat and convective heat often take the edge off the cold… I also have shit ventilation so I've considered a heat lamp but why not have a heat lamp that also produces some light that happens to have good quality in the light colors that cover the entire range.

    With that said I prefer led for so many things where light output or controllable color are key. My portable photo/filming light gadget thing uses 2 led groups mixed together to adjust the color temperature… I think it looks the best warm but not too warm but objects they light look best between 5300k and 6000k maybe they're not so good at maintain good color rendering at all color temperatures.

    Right tool for right job. Want heat or a very smooth light… then incandescent or maybe halogen is the way to go. Want maximum light with minimum power… led. Doesn't mean I support banning the tech. The market can do a better job of regulating than any panel of experts can because the market takes into account each and every individual buyer and seller as a whole not just as an average. Incandescent is and will forever be useful unless we can get 100% color rendering compared to incandescent or the sun in leds and we find a way to emit high levels of infrared in the range used to transfer heat… maybe a hot filament? Without destroying the diodes of course. That would be a neat heat lamp… can optionally be off or on for each component. Right now I use led mostly due to size and shape but I would happily use incandescent in the winter months.

    However it was possible to get incandescent lights to love longer. There was a mafia of big corporations that enforced the life span limit to boost profits. Collusion hurts everyone, free markets work only when there is little to know collusion.

  9. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Mitchell Tuckness says:

    At this point, I miss President Trump. But, great video, if you disagree with someone, even the President, you shouldn't be afraid to present your viewpoint, as long as it is logical and supported.

  10. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Simon Dean says:

    I always hated CFL. The light was too cold, took too long to warm up, and made my head funny. Incandescent were better. But LED bulbs have come in tremendously, both in cost and functionality.

  11. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Platys Platys says:

    Actually, based on frequency of light emitted, you can affect colour of observed object.
    Just a jab cause I hate if someone starts video by being wrong.
    Love the channel tho.

  12. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars ElectroBOOM says:

    This is NOT A POLITICAL VIDEO!!! I'm a simple man…
    Also regarding Halogen light bulbs, it seems in countries with 240VAC they are designed such that their life is same or better than incandescent. In 120V of north America almost all I can see for halogen is half the life of incandescent for same power rating (make sure lamps run on same voltage and light output when comparing). In any case, I filled my table per my local values for my lamps, and some per my taste. you can always adjust the table values to your local numbers and taste and recalculate. LED still will get top point. and who cares if halogen scores a bit higher WHEN LED IS WAY HIGHER ANYWAY! and remember… THIS IS NOT A POLITICAL VIDEO!

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