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it depends on the lumen output of this LED bulb, but surely if it will have a lumen output higher than 1200 lm it will be brigher,Hello,
Surely a 15W version of this would be brighter than an old 100W incandescent bulb?
not agree because many of LED light bulb use aluminium as heat sink, and the problem with LEDs is always how to cool the LED die, and how to transfer light from die to outside the PCBThe LED PCBs would all be big enough, and comprise enough cooling copper "land" area , such that no aluminium heatsink was required. Making aluminium from bauxite takes prodigious amounts of energy, so aluminium should not be used in heatsinks for lightbulbs....do you agree?
..the HarvardEng LED PCB in post #4 above is specified as having 50,000 hours of lifetime.perhaps that the product you proposed have a limited lifetime,
....this sounds like a good concept..(hopefully decently thermally conductive silicone) -kind of using the silicone gel like a potting compound around the LED PCB.(?)why not make a similar sized enclosure but filled with non electrical conducting liquid as the transfer agent. I'm thinking of a silicone gel that can be poured and has good heat transfer characteristics and also protects all the internal wiring/components from water ingress.
...I wonder if it would be best to just do a single large , round PCB like the PCBs shown in post #4 above, and just direct it downwards. It would certainly be cheaper, and maybe such a PCB would end up giving sufficient light at wider angle anyway. Page 11 of the following Cree xpe led datasheet shows how badly the led light drops off as one goes outwards from the zenith.....the multi-faceted PCB may be quite good at lighting a small area. The light cone will be the sum of the cones of each LED though and that will give quite a confined circle of illumination
they didn't mention this, is it worse than the mercury?Did they mention the toxic paint in CFLs I wonder?
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