#20,765 in Tools & Home Improvement
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Reddit mentions of Osram LED Lamp/E27 Base/Warm White (2700 K)/Replaces 60 W Incandescent Bulbs/8.50 W/Frosted/LED Base Classic A, Pack of 3

Sentiment score: 0
Reddit mentions: 2

We found 2 Reddit mentions of Osram LED Lamp/E27 Base/Warm White (2700 K)/Replaces 60 W Incandescent Bulbs/8.50 W/Frosted/LED Base Classic A, Pack of 3. Here are the top ones.

Osram LED Lamp/E27 Base/Warm White (2700 K)/Replaces 60 W Incandescent Bulbs/8.50 W/Frosted/LED Base Classic A, Pack of 3
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Energy consumption 10 kWh/1000h at 806 lmLong lifespan - up to 15000 hours and up to 100000 switching cyclesWarm white light for comfort and relaxation, ideal for decorative use throughout the home and in the living roomImmediately at full power, no warm-up timeEasy replacement of standard light bulbs, genuine replacement for a conventional 60 W light bulb (outdoor use only in suitable lamps)
Specs:
ColorWarm White
Height2.362204722 Inches
Length4.330708657 Inches
Number of items3
Size3er Promo-Pack
Weight0.09479877266 Pounds
Width2.362204722 Inches

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Found 2 comments on Osram LED Lamp/E27 Base/Warm White (2700 K)/Replaces 60 W Incandescent Bulbs/8.50 W/Frosted/LED Base Classic A, Pack of 3:

u/Nononogrammstoday · 2 pointsr/europe

Prices for LED lights dropped quite a lot over the past 10-ish years and it seems to still continue that trend.

The most common bulb types are down to a few Euro per piece, which they should save in energy costs within a couple of months.

To be fair, iirc the old incandescent light bulbs were even cheaper, roughly around 1€ a piece, so technically LED bulbs are still more expensive to purchase.

But on the other hand I'd regard bulbs for 2-4€ a piece as clearly within the negligible price region.


e.g. 60w-equivalent e27 at 2700K are about 1.50€ each


e.g. 60w-equivalent e27 at 4000K are about 2.50€ each






Less common bulb types as well as more fancy bulbs are more expensive but back in the day that was the case with similar incandescant light bulbs as well.






Anyway, those discussions aside: What I really like on LED bulbs is that even the very bright ones won't get to hot. I still remember those bloody little halogen lamps embedded in kitchen units which got to hot to touch within a minute, and the 100w-bulbs with the same behaviour. I'm not sad about these being practically gone nowadays. LED elements allow for a lot of new form factors which weren't viable with classic bulbs, and they make various existing forms more safe, like fairy light chains on a christmas tree.



They also got way better at creating various "good" light temperatures with LEDs, which was one of the main weaknesses the tech had a decade ago.

u/Navigia · 1 pointr/todayilearned

It wasn't on the ones that broke early.

Example:

This one is made in Germany

These aren't