Philips CFL Bulbs
Philips compact fluorescent light bulbs (CFL bulbs) consume up to 75% less energy than incandescent bulbs while retaining the warm, inviting soft light of a traditional bulb. As a result, they are a great choice for use in decorative fixtures, table lamps and recessed lighting, and are available in many of the same familiar shapes and sizes as tungsten light bulbs, but will last up to 15 times as long.
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Philips compact fluorescent light bulbs (CFL bulbs) consume up to 75% less energy than incandescent bulbs while retaining the warm, inviting soft light of a traditional bulb. As a result, they are a great choice for use in decorative fixtures, table lamps and recessed lighting, and are available in many of the same familiar shapes and sizes as tungsten light bulbs, but will last up to 15 times as long.
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With (LED) energy-saving light bulbs there are fittings/lamp bases with 2 pins or 4 pins. Always choose a energy-saving bulb with the same cap/base, otherwise it will not fit in the fixture and will not work. Energy-saving bulbs with a 2-pin base work with a conventional ballast (EM) incl. starter. Energy-saving bulbs with a 4-pin socket work with an electronic ballast (HF) without a starter.
The colour code is a combination of colour rendering (CRI) and light colour (Kelvin). The first number indicates the colour rendering (1 = very poor colour rendering, 9 = maximum colour fastness). The second and third number contains the light colour. Example: the colour code 830 consists of good colour rendering (8) and warm white light (3000K).
Every bulb or fixture has an energy efficiency class A to G. Energy label A is the most efficient and G the least. LED lighting is the most sustainable lighting technique. Even if a LED bulb is rated E or lower, they still save 70% of energy compared to conventional lighting with the same energy label. Why is it the same label then? To motivate LED brands to get even more durable.
