Woot has 50 pack AmazonCommercial 60 Watt Equivalent, 10,000 Hours, Non-Dimmable, E26 Base, A19 LED Light Bulb, Daylight for $25.99. Shipping is free for Prime members.
There are always plenty of sales on the 60w equivalent LED's, but could use some higher wattage equivalent bulbs. And now down to 10,000 hours, what happened to the 50,000 hour rated bulbs? Maybe Amazon is being more realistic.... never had one last 50,000 hours yet, but it sounds good.
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from PurplePeopleEater
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800 lumens and no mention of exact color temperature
They do have the option of Daylight or Soft White.... Daylight should be around 6000 to 6500 kelvin, while Soft White should be around 3000 to 3500 kelvin.
Not offered, but Cool White should be in the 4,000 to 5,000 kelvin range with a hint of blue that is more or less versatile. Even when rated specific, I have yet to have any LED spot on, so you have the choice of subdued white light (soft white), or blue bright (daylight) lighting..... maybe
There are always plenty of sales on the 60w equivalent LED's, but could use some higher wattage equivalent bulbs. And now down to 10,000 hours, what happened to the 50,000 hour rated bulbs? Maybe Amazon is being more realistic.... never had one last 50,000 hours yet, but it sounds good.
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They do have the option of Daylight or Soft White.... Daylight should be around 6000 to 6500 kelvin, while Soft White should be around 3000 to 3500 kelvin.
Not offered, but Cool White should be in the 4,000 to 5,000 kelvin range with a hint of blue that is more or less versatile. Even when rated specific, I have yet to have any LED spot on, so you have the choice of subdued white light (soft white), or blue bright (daylight) lighting..... maybe https://static.slickdealscdn.com/ima...lies/smile.gif
Daylight is 4,000 to 5,000 Cool white is 6,000 to 7,000.
Daylight is 4,000 to 5,000 Cool white is 6,000 to 7,000.
In the USA, the term 'Cool White' carries over from Florescent in the 4,000 to 5,000 kelvin range, whereas Asian manufactures of LED's coat their lights with a visible blue haze and call those "Cool White,' Cool Daylight,' etc. To save the confusion, EVERY listing should describe actual kelvin.
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Not offered, but Cool White should be in the 4,000 to 5,000 kelvin range with a hint of blue that is more or less versatile. Even when rated specific, I have yet to have any LED spot on, so you have the choice of subdued white light (soft white), or blue bright (daylight) lighting..... maybe
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They do have the option of Daylight or Soft White.... Daylight should be around 6000 to 6500 kelvin, while Soft White should be around 3000 to 3500 kelvin.
Not offered, but Cool White should be in the 4,000 to 5,000 kelvin range with a hint of blue that is more or less versatile. Even when rated specific, I have yet to have any LED spot on, so you have the choice of subdued white light (soft white), or blue bright (daylight) lighting..... maybe https://static.slickdealscdn.com/ima...lies/smile.gif
Is that the reason why they don't ship to those states? Do those states have some laws against low CRI bulbs?