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yardwork

(64,777 posts)
Sat Jul 14, 2012, 08:27 AM Jul 2012

This message was self-deleted by its author

This message was self-deleted by its author (yardwork) on Thu Jan 10, 2013, 11:33 AM. When the original post in a discussion thread is self-deleted, the entire discussion thread is automatically locked so new replies cannot be posted.

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This message was self-deleted by its author (Original Post) yardwork Jul 2012 OP
Yes liberal N proud Jul 2012 #1
Thank you! yardwork Jul 2012 #2
It's probably going to be very hard to find something bright enough for you. PoliticAverse Jul 2012 #3
The new fixture's instructions say "use 60 watt candelabra base bulbs or less." yardwork Jul 2012 #4
Are you sure the old bulbs are 60 watt ? PoliticAverse Jul 2012 #5
^^^ this ^^^ struggle4progress Jul 2012 #6
Well, you were right, and I ran out and bought LEDs before reading your post here. yardwork Jul 2012 #8
So if I can find 23-26 watt candelabra compact fluorescents it might put out enough light? yardwork Jul 2012 #11
A 16 watt CFL will have about the same lumen rating (~900) as a 60 watt incandescent, PoliticAverse Jul 2012 #13
That is very helpful! Thank you! yardwork Jul 2012 #15
The 23 watt CFL bulbs worked! The light is much brighter. But the bulbs are touching the glass shade yardwork Jul 2012 #17
Sounds like it's time to search for a different fixture. n/t PoliticAverse Jul 2012 #20
I think I might be ok. I took the bulbs out and moved the outlets on their flexible wires. yardwork Jul 2012 #21
Dunno. It depends on which ones you can find Warpy Jul 2012 #7
You were so right about the mood lighting effect. See upthread - I'm starting over. yardwork Jul 2012 #9
The ones from Costco cast a yellowish light, a little paler yellow Warpy Jul 2012 #10
lighten the walls? or even just one (or the ceiling) Kali Jul 2012 #12
The walls are dark, true, but the previous light fixture cast a strong light that was effective. yardwork Jul 2012 #14
I do like that the CFLs can put out a lot more light than the same wattage incandescents Kali Jul 2012 #16
I remember reading about your plans to hang a chandelier in the barn! yardwork Jul 2012 #18
I may get motivated finally to hang that thing Kali Jul 2012 #19
LED Lights! Offtopic yuri258 Jan 2013 #23
Spam deleted by bluesbassman (MIR Team) jpledlighting Dec 2012 #22
I'm going to self-delete because my questions were answered and this is attracking spam bots. yardwork Jan 2013 #24
text of original OP yardwork Jan 2013 #25

yardwork

(64,777 posts)
2. Thank you!
Sat Jul 14, 2012, 08:35 AM
Jul 2012

PoliticAverse

(26,366 posts)
3. It's probably going to be very hard to find something bright enough for you.
Sat Jul 14, 2012, 08:44 AM
Jul 2012

Be sure to check the specified 'lumen' rating on anything you're considering.

Can you tell us what was the lumen rating on the incandescents you bought ?

The fixture takes candelabra base bulbs ?

yardwork

(64,777 posts)
4. The new fixture's instructions say "use 60 watt candelabra base bulbs or less."
Sat Jul 14, 2012, 09:16 AM
Jul 2012

I had some old incandescent candelabra base bulbs and put them in, but the effect is too dim. The fixture holds only two bulbs. If I could replace the bulbs with something that is twice as bright, it would be fine.

I don't know the lumen rating of the old bulbs I used because I don't have the package.

PoliticAverse

(26,366 posts)
5. Are you sure the old bulbs are 60 watt ?
Sat Jul 14, 2012, 09:53 AM
Jul 2012

A 60 watt incandescent will put out from 600-900 lumens, depending on the specific bulb design.
A candelabra base compact fluorescent may be your best choice if they fit in the fixture.
Your best bet would probably be 2 23-26watt candelabra-based compact fluorescents if you can find some.

struggle4progress

(120,556 posts)
6. ^^^ this ^^^
Sat Jul 14, 2012, 10:39 AM
Jul 2012

yardwork

(64,777 posts)
8. Well, you were right, and I ran out and bought LEDs before reading your post here.
Sat Jul 14, 2012, 04:14 PM
Jul 2012

Now I'm sorry. Spent $35 on two LEDs and the light quality is worse than before, plus it's a weird reddish glow. Rather than continue to throw good money after bad, I've decided to pull out the new fixture and replace it with a four bulb fixture.

Now I will slow down and wait for advice. Any recommendations on a good basic ceiling light fixture for a kitchen with dark walls and not a lot of natural light? I want to put my home on the market soon and bright light in the kitchen is a must. Please advise on type of fixture and type of bulbs!

Thank you! I'm sadder and waiting to be wiser.

yardwork

(64,777 posts)
11. So if I can find 23-26 watt candelabra compact fluorescents it might put out enough light?
Sun Jul 15, 2012, 09:54 AM
Jul 2012

I'll look at Lowes. I take it that compact fluorescents with much lower wattage will be about the same as what I'm experiencing with incandescent and LED?

PoliticAverse

(26,366 posts)
13. A 16 watt CFL will have about the same lumen rating (~900) as a 60 watt incandescent,
Sun Jul 15, 2012, 11:16 AM
Jul 2012

a 26 watt CFL will be equivalent to a 100 watt incandescent (~1600 lumens).

yardwork

(64,777 posts)
15. That is very helpful! Thank you!
Sun Jul 15, 2012, 11:18 AM
Jul 2012

yardwork

(64,777 posts)
17. The 23 watt CFL bulbs worked! The light is much brighter. But the bulbs are touching the glass shade
Sun Jul 15, 2012, 02:28 PM
Jul 2012

The fixture was clearly designed for smaller bulbs. The candelabra CFL fit into the outlets, but they are in contact with the glass shade on the ceiling. They get hot to the touch. Is this a potential fire hazard, or could the glass shade discolor or break because it is in direct contact with the bulbs? Would it be better to try to squeeze the bulbs up toward the ceiling and the foil lining the fixture pan, or let the bulbs touch the glass shade, or should I give up and replace the fixture?

I am so close to solving this. Thank you very much for your help.

PoliticAverse

(26,366 posts)
20. Sounds like it's time to search for a different fixture. n/t
Sun Jul 15, 2012, 07:48 PM
Jul 2012

yardwork

(64,777 posts)
21. I think I might be ok. I took the bulbs out and moved the outlets on their flexible wires.
Sun Jul 15, 2012, 09:52 PM
Jul 2012

Last edited Mon Jul 16, 2012, 02:59 PM - Edit history (1)

Now the bulbs fit and are neither touching the glass shade nor the foil backing. And tonight the light is bright and beautiful. I think it's solved! Thank you!

Edit follow-up. Not solved. I've realized that the output of the bulbs is 100 watts each. That's why I'm getting the wonderful bright light, and why the bulbs are too big and hot for this fixture. I called Lowe's, and they said they have a three-bulb fixture - total 180 watts, since the bulbs still can't exceed 60 watts each - that should work. So tonight I'm going to take the new fixture down and replace it with another new one. Sigh.

Warpy

(113,131 posts)
7. Dunno. It depends on which ones you can find
Sat Jul 14, 2012, 12:44 PM
Jul 2012

I got a box of them at Costco and while the color is good, the light throw is piss poor. I'd call it mood lighting, not task lighting.

I know CFLs aren't things of beauty, but that's where you're going to get the most economical task lighting. If you can cram two of those into the fixture, you're golden.

yardwork

(64,777 posts)
9. You were so right about the mood lighting effect. See upthread - I'm starting over.
Sat Jul 14, 2012, 04:14 PM
Jul 2012

Advice welcome! I will slow down and wait for advice.

Warpy

(113,131 posts)
10. The ones from Costco cast a yellowish light, a little paler yellow
Sat Jul 14, 2012, 06:45 PM
Jul 2012

than standard incandescent bulbs, close to white light. I do recommend them for dim ambient lighting. I use them in the bedroom for TV watching without reading.

I find the CFLs that are labeled "equivalent to a 100W incandescent bulb" work best for me for task lighting.

The major advantage to the LED lights is that they'll outlive me. The CFLs need changing eventually.

Kali

(55,881 posts)
12. lighten the walls? or even just one (or the ceiling)
Sun Jul 15, 2012, 11:09 AM
Jul 2012

they may be absorbing whatever you try...

yardwork

(64,777 posts)
14. The walls are dark, true, but the previous light fixture cast a strong light that was effective.
Sun Jul 15, 2012, 11:17 AM
Jul 2012

The previous chandelier-type fixture wasn't right for the space, and became damaged and had to be replaced. It held five candelabra base incandescent lights. The replacement holds two lights and is much too dim. I'm going to try one more thing - compact fluorescents - but if that doesn't work the best solution is to try again with a new light fixture.

Kali

(55,881 posts)
16. I do like that the CFLs can put out a lot more light than the same wattage incandescents
Sun Jul 15, 2012, 11:58 AM
Jul 2012

the color is a little harsher but definitely brighter.

not sure what equivalent the small chandelier base bulbs can put out but man do I hate the cheap light fixtures that limit you to a 60 watt bulb. CFLs have saved me with those!

I even found a cfl that fits into this strange brass desk lamp that took those long aquarium or appliance type bulbs (with a regular base). it was limited to a 40 watt bulb - WTF? that was like reading with a christmas light bulb. With the CFL you can actually see print.

good luck, your dilemma has reminded me of the crystal dingleberry chandelier I have in a box in the closet that I have been daydreaming of hanging in the barn/tack room

yardwork

(64,777 posts)
18. I remember reading about your plans to hang a chandelier in the barn!
Sun Jul 15, 2012, 02:29 PM
Jul 2012

Pictures, please!

How many horses do you have?

Kali

(55,881 posts)
19. I may get motivated finally to hang that thing
Sun Jul 15, 2012, 02:39 PM
Jul 2012

if not actually hooking it up at least get it out of my closet.

hmm horses. There are two usable at the moment, although one has mouth cancer, of all the shitty things. I wrote about him in the lounge about a month ago (might be in my journal, not sure)

then there is an old bum that hangs around with those two plus the new (old) riding mule I just acquired

then I have a herd of useless range horses that at least manage to feed themselves - there are currently 7 of those. 2 are broke to lead but haven't ever been ridden and one is just a long yearling. SIGH

 

yuri258

(2 posts)
23. LED Lights! Offtopic
Thu Jan 10, 2013, 01:48 AM
Jan 2013

horses? What r u talking about? quite off-topic.

 

jpledlighting

(1 post)
22. Spam deleted by bluesbassman (MIR Team)
Fri Dec 28, 2012, 07:09 PM
Dec 2012

yardwork

(64,777 posts)
24. I'm going to self-delete because my questions were answered and this is attracking spam bots.
Thu Jan 10, 2013, 11:32 AM
Jan 2013

Thanks everyone. I ended up buying a new fixture and hiring an electrician to install it. He did a great job and the new fixture has three 60 watt fluorescent lights that work well and give me plenty of light in my kitchen.

yardwork

(64,777 posts)
25. text of original OP
Thu Jan 10, 2013, 11:32 AM
Jan 2013

Need advice on lighting - can I substitute LED lights for chandelier-type incandescents?

Last edited Sat Jul 14, 2012, 10:19 AM USA/ET - Edit history (1)
I just replaced the ceiling light fixture in my kitchen. The trouble is, I it's too dim. It is designed to hold two 60 watt candelabra base incandescent lights. Can I exchange the recommended lightbulbs with LED lights? Will it be brighter? Will I be able to find LED lights that fit into the sockets? Is this safe?

Thank you in advance for advice. I'm considering taking down the fixture and returning it to the store, but it took a long time to install and I'd prefer not to have to start all over again.

edit for clarity - the fixture requires two candelabra base bulbs, each 60 watts or less.

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