This weekend there was small expo at the local mall and one of the area power companies had a booth promoting compact fluorescent lights (CFL) and LED lighting. There was demonstration to show the difference in power between fluorescent and incandescent lighting using a very large "compact" (if it could still be called such) fluorescent light
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Recessed bulbs in the kitchen ceiling behave the same way if they have been off all night, because they are nested up into an otherwise well-insulated attic crawlspace that gets chilly compared to the interior house temperature.
Bulbs installed in table lamps mostly come on at near full brightness, though I recently replaced one of those U-shaped ones in my desk lamp and the new one takes a minute to brighten up. The new one is a different color temperature as well, "warm" white as opposed to "cool".
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I'm sure temperature is a factor, too, though I think we only have one recessed fixture. Our outdoor lights are still all incandescent bulbs, but they see so little use it's hardly an issue. How cold does it get in that barn? I'm a bit leery of using CFLs in outdoor or near-outdoor situations due to the temperatures they'd encounter. If that doesn't affect bulb life significantly, I could see eventually replacing some of the outdoor lights with CFLs.
Almost all of our CFLs are the spiral design. We do have a few of the U-shaped ones, and I've noticed the same power vs. startup time and brightness relation with them.
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I had ordinary straight tube fluorescent fixtures over the rabbit cages there and they would not start at all in cold weather.
The riding arena has six mercury vapor bulbs at about 750 watts each. Those have a loooooong warm up cycle in subzero weather, but they work. We find the bulbs never burn out, but the ballast transformers do, for some reason, and since they are a part of the fixture, the whole fixture has to be replaced. I'd like a better lighting option to replace those.
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