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Super awesome bulb?

Handcannon

Well-Known Member
I walked downstairs today & thought I smelled something melting in the wiring of my house. I checked everything I could think of. I went upstairs for something, came back down it was dark. Went to check the light socket & the F-ing bulb was melting!!! This is one of those super awesome new enviromentaly friendly energy saving 3 year light bulbs that the Gov't is going to make mandatory in a few years. I installed it in Dec of 2006. The plastic around the tube started to melt. Fire hazzard or super awesome bulb?


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No product is 100%. We've been using those bulbs for two years in our house, thus far none have given us a problem and we have not had to change one out yet.

Knock on wood I didn't just THA4 (jynx) myself. /forum/images/%%GRAEMLIN_URL%%/wink.gif

"Looks like the weather is gunna be GREAT!"

I still chuckle when I think about that quote Thomas. /forum/images/%%GRAEMLIN_URL%%/smile.gif
 
they are suppose to be energy effecient. would that be after the house burns down?must be a factory defect, call the manufacture, they need to know.
 
WHATEVER you do, don't replace it with an incandescent. I can see the tears streaming down Al Gore's face as we speak. /forum/images/%%GRAEMLIN_URL%%/wink.gif
 
Now this is something that I have experience in... As a matter of fact I help manage all (chemcial and universal) wastes here at Iowa State University. Every campus in the nation is pushing for some "GREEN" status, as in "Our campus is more environmentally friendly than yours" type of pi$$in contest. I composed an article for a campus flyer called "Green Light"...that compared compact flourescents shown above, to ordinary incandescent bulbs.

AS I've noticed, again Earl E is right on the mark, all fluorescent bulbs (compact or not) contain mercury. Because of this they can not legally be disposed of in the trash. They need to be taken to the local HouseHold Hazardous waste collection site for your area.

What most people don't realize is that the EPA (and OSHA) sets very strict limits on mercury pollution. Mercury readily evaoporates ( link ) at "around" room temperatures. The mercury gas is regulated at extrememly low PPM, OSHA's limit is .005ppm. Standard four foot fluourescent bulbs have approx one drop of mercury in them. This is converted to a gas, which increases the volitality of fumes from broken bulbs. Bascially one broken bulb, not too bad, but two or three in the same room and you're breathing some nasty stuff and creating a potential contamination site.

Seems weird to me, considering we used to break thermometers in Science class and roll the mercury around in our palms (in 5th grade) because we thought it was cool. Maybe that explains why I'm weird...or perhaps that's just naturally occuring.

Another thing most people don't realize or understand about mercury is that it has it's own cycle that operates almost exactly like the water cycle. Think about that for a time or two.

What I found in my research in comparing compact fluorescents (CF) vs standard incandescent bulbs is this.
1. CF contain mercury, Incandescents do not.
2. CF bulbs cost more than incandescents...mostly due to their design and surcharge money to cover disposal costs.
3. CF bulbs do NOT last longer than incandescent bulbs, contrary to what the CF manufacturers and tree-huggers would like you to believe.
4. CF bulbs use less energy than incandescent bulbs, but emit less light as well.

In summation though, if your electricity comes from a Coal Fueled Power Plant it is more beneficial to use a compact fluorescent than an incandescent due to the efficency difference in the bulbs and mercury content generated from powering them. All coal plants emit mercury, as a bi-product of coal combustion...and even though CF bulbs contain mercury... over the life span of the bulb, the environmental impact concerning mercury is higher with incandescents than compact fluroescents because of energy need/not as efficient. If your energy comes from wind generation, the differences are almost erased and one isn't really any better than the other, as one requires more energy to operate and the other contains hazardous waste.

LONG WINDED, but food for thought. I'm glad your house didn't burn down and I hope you disposed of the bulb properly, our fish will thank you.
 
Yeah,
I replaced damn near every bulb in our house 2 years ago with "fancy" bulbs...suppose to last 7 years and pay for themselves in x amount of time. Currently, I have about 10 of my bulbs awaiting replacement. Due to cost of replacement and the pain in the arse required for disposal...things are sitting dark in some portions of hte house. Not sure I am really saving much NRG either?? Maybe now I am bc i have less bulbs running LOL
 
This was the 1st one that was melting. One just stopped working & another one was like a strobe, you could see the gas moving through it. I have 12 of these just in my basement, 3 out of 12 in a year is terrible at $3 each. I called Bomgaars & the guy said to bring it in & they'll exchange them.
 
Had the same thing happen and just happened to be there when it did, it was hotter than hell when I pulled it out. I'll not be replacing anymore bulbs with these miracle bulbs. "If sounds too good to be true, it probably is" BTW I threw it in the Mississippi, I figured it couldn't hurt anything in there. /forum/images/%%GRAEMLIN_URL%%/grin.gif
 
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