Originally posted by EqualOpportunities
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Reply to: One for the electrical experts...
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Previously on "One for the electrical experts..."
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Originally posted by threaded View PostNooooo, dimmers control the temperature the filament attains, lower temperature means less light.
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Originally posted by gingerjedi View PostWhen you dim your lights with a standard dimmer switch does it then use less electricity?
Originally posted by gingerjedi View PostWhat about halogen lamps? I have one with an in line sliding dimmer, does a fat resister just burn up my Kw's?
Originally posted by gingerjedi View PostI've been searching the net but keep coming up with conflicting answers.
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Originally posted by miffy View PostEach bulb is 40W and with the dimmer on full, low and behold the power drawn was 160W exactly (bulbs strangely draw a precise amount of power). Even dimmed to an acceptable level it still draws about two thirds of the electricity. Mine was about 100W when I set it at a level you'd be comfortable with.
HTH
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Originally posted by DimPrawn View PostDon't waste money on expensive light dimmers. Simply slip on a pair of sunglasses for that cosy relaxing ambience.
HTH
http://forums.contractoruk.com/gener...-top-tips.html
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Don't waste money buying expensive sunglasses; make your own from an old egg carton and string. Create slits to see through. You may sceptical and look like an iguana but this could save your life if you were stranded in a desert.
-- Ray Mears
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Yes, dimmers work (effectively) by swithcing the light on and off rapidly, so less power is used at lower settings - the extra power isn't used up by the dimmer.
Beware of using a dimmer on low energy bulbs though because the electronics in the bulb compensates for the dimmer by using extra power in the short time that the bulb is switched on - this extra current can burn out (melt) components in the bulb.
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Don't waste money on expensive light dimmers. Simply slip on a pair of sunglasses for that cosy relaxing ambience.
HTH
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I looked at this about 8 months ago when I was measuring the power consumption of most of the things I use on a day to day basis (in an attempt to reduce my ever increasing electricity bill).
I had a fancy lamp in my lounge which used 4 x candle type bulbs and had a foot operated dimmer. I plugged my watt meter in an measured it!
Each bulb is 40W and with the dimmer on full, low and behold the power drawn was 160W exactly (bulbs strangely draw a precise amount of power). Even dimmed to an acceptable level it still draws about two thirds of the electricity. Mine was about 100W when I set it at a level you'd be comfortable with.
So yes, it does indeed cost you less when you dim your lights but you'd have to dim them to very low levels to get any major benefit. You'd have to be sitting in near darkness!
In the end I swapped the lamp for something with a large shade that would hide those funny shaped energy saving bulbs. So my lamp went from 100W to 27W. Same level of light for much less power.
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Originally posted by gingerjedi View PostI don't understand but it sounds technological enough to be believable!
Thanks
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Originally posted by zeitghostIf it's dimmed, it's not so hot...
If it's not so hot, it's dissipating less power.
Hopefully, in a halfway decent dimmer, there's a triac on burst or phase control which reduces the power efficiently, thus reducing your electricity bill.
Thanks
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Where's Zeity when you need him??
Post this in TPD and he might find it
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Originally posted by gingerjedi View PostWhen you dim your lights with a standard dimmer switch does it then use less electricity?
What about halogen lamps? I have one with an in line sliding dimmer, does a fat resister just burn up my Kw's?
I've been searching the net but keep coming up with conflicting answers.
But it might be a load of Threaded.
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