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Green Building Bible, Fourth Edition
Green Building Bible, fourth edition (both books)
These two books are the perfect starting place to help you get to grips with one of the most vitally important aspects of our society - our homes and living environment.

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    •  
      CommentAuthorrichy
    • CommentTimeJul 30th 2011
     
    OK guys get me up to speed on LED replacement of halogen bulbs that seem to last only a few weeks and are expensive to run.

    I'm seeing 4x LEDs on ebay for twelve quid from China.

    I've got 6 opportunities in my bathroom and 21 in my Lounge/dining room so advice is much needeed!
    •  
      CommentAuthorDamonHD
    • CommentTimeJul 31st 2011
     
    Look for lm/W (lumens per Watt) or 60 or higher (ie more efficient than CFL).

    Do not fit LEDs in recessed sockets without ventilation since LEDs don't like heat and will have their life shortened.

    Rgds

    Damon
    •  
      CommentAuthorSteamyTea
    • CommentTimeAug 1st 2011
     
    Posted By: DamonHDwithout ventilation

    This could lead to other problems as there is some rule about not having a hole into a void, may not apply to domestic dwellings though, really can't remember anything today.
    •  
      CommentAuthorDamonHD
    • CommentTimeAug 2nd 2011
     
    There are fire-rated luminaries for that sort of issue, ST, I believe. But probably still poor from a thermal management p-o-v.

    Rgds

    Damon
    • CommentAuthorCWatters
    • CommentTimeAug 2nd 2011
     
    <blockquote><cite>Posted By: richy</cite>
    I'm seeing 4x LEDs on ebay for twelve quid from China. </blockquote>

    Important to understand what you are getting.

    A 35W halogen can produce around 600 Lumens and a 50W can make 900 Lumens. Picking an LED on ebay LED at random...

    http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/GU10-Warm-White-24-LED-Spot-Lamp-Light-Bulb-Spotlight-/300574352690?pt=UK_Light_Bulbs&hash=item45fba0a532

    The spec says...

    Luminescence: 10000 MCD

    If we are generous and assume a 180 degree beam angle, the converter here..

    http://led.linear1.org/lumen.wiz

    says that works out at just 63 Lumens. So you would need 10 to produce same light level as a single 35W halogen.

    It's perhaps worth noting that you may not need 600 Lumens. There is some evidence that people are happy with slightly lower figures from LEDs. eg LEDs producing 400-500 Lumens might be acceptable replacements for 35W halogen in some situations. In others you might need more fittings.
  1.  
    So you need to look for at least 100 Lumens per Watt from a decent quality LED? What would be a good Lumen figure from a 5W unit? I notice day light and warm white units vary greatly in lumen values. Would daylight be better suited to bathrooms and warm white for living accom possibly? On the LP's site would the V1 still be efficient or would it be worth paying for a newer V version. I also need to work out how my GU10 fittings will effect the life of the unit from a temperature point of view.
    Can anyone recommend a good value LED with good lumen output? It seems from surfing with my friend Google that loads of LED's are, excuse the term, POOP. Would this be correct?
    Thanks,
    Gusty.
    • CommentAuthorCWatters
    • CommentTimeAug 4th 2011
     
    for info I read somewhere that the recommended amount of lighting is roughly...

    Hallway - 7.5 lumens per square foot
    Living Room - 15 ditto
    Kitchen - 35 ditto

    but can't find where I got that from now.
    •  
      CommentAuthorDamonHD
    • CommentTimeAug 4th 2011
     
    100lm/W is pretty cutting edge; I think around 60lm/W (so the same as a decent CFL) is pretty good at the moment and there are many sources for such.

    Rgds

    Damon
    • CommentAuthorrhamdu
    • CommentTimeAug 4th 2011
     
    I've tried Light Planet's V3 and V5 warm whites.

    The 60 degree V5s have the best beam shape, and are just about bright enough to be considered as replacements for 50W mains halogen or 35W 12V. The colour is slightly pink but pleasant enough.

    The V3s have a sunnier colour which is a better match for halogen. The 50 degree ones have a sharp cutoff at the edge of the beam, which can look too dramatic - though it does mean lateral glare is very low.

    The 120 degree V3s aren't spotlights, and are useless for accent lighting. Brightness at the centre of the beam is disappointing. However, LP say the 120deg V3s work well where people have a ceiling full of downlighters and want flat, even illumination over the whole room.
  2.  
    Thanks, all great information,
    Gusty.
    • CommentAuthorBeau
    • CommentTimeFeb 3rd 2012
     
    Here are my experiences of LED lighting.
    I recently replaced the halogen lighting in my parents kitchen.
    Over the worktops I have replaced 4 MR16s with 6 Halers Evoleds (warm white). I cannot measured the difference but the LEDs win hands down. There is less spread of light but intensity and colour in my view is excellent. Over the table they wanted angle-able lights, I got 2 Neorbit fittings (again warm white). These have a good spread of light but are a bit underwhelming and I find the colour too yellow. I think we might have been expecting too much of the Neorbit lights but they are very pleased with the Halers Evoleds, they also have a good sized flange so they are quite forgiving of hole size. None have failed yet but they were only done 6 months ago.
    •  
      CommentAuthorJSHarris
    • CommentTimeFeb 3rd 2012
     
    I would endorse your comments about MR16 LEDs, Beau. My workshop has been lit with an array of warm white MR16s for over a year now and I think they are superb. Best of all I've not had a single failure (yet), which seems to be quite a contrast with the experience of those using cheap GU10 LEDs.
    • CommentAuthorBeau
    • CommentTimeFeb 3rd 2012
     
    Sorry JSH I have not explained myself very well. The whole fittings have been replaced, the Evoleds and the Neorbit are dedicated LED fixtures.

    Beau
    • CommentAuthorpmagowan
    • CommentTimeFeb 3rd 2012
     
    I may have this completely wrong but, the problem with LEDs seems to be the change from 240V to 12v at each bulb. This heats up and the units fail. Would it be better to have a single transformer and use 12V LED units as designed for boats and caravans? Obviously you would have to take into account increased resistance in the wire etc but for single rooms such as the kitchen this would not be a problem.
    •  
      CommentAuthorJSHarris
    • CommentTimeFeb 3rd 2012
     
    <blockquote><cite>Posted By: Beau</cite>Sorry JSH I have not explained myself very well. The whole fittings have been replaced, the Evoleds and the Neorbit are dedicated LED fixtures.

    Beau</blockquote>

    No, my misunderstanding, Beau! My MR16 LEDs are 12 V ones.



    <blockquote><cite>Posted By: pmagowan</cite>I may have this completely wrong but, the problem with LEDs seems to be the change from 240V to 12v at each bulb. This heats up and the units fail. Would it be better to have a single transformer and use 12V LED units as designed for boats and caravans? Obviously you would have to take into account increased resistance in the wire etc but for single rooms such as the kitchen this would not be a problem.</blockquote>

    I feel very similarly, to the extent that I'm going to build in a 12 V bus to my new build to run 12 V LED lighting. The 12 V MR16's I bought very cheaply from China well over a year ago have been excellent, no failures at all and a perfectly acceptable light output (although I've not measured it).
    • CommentAuthorSeret
    • CommentTimeFeb 3rd 2012 edited
     
    Posted By: pmagowanI may have this completely wrong but, the problem with LEDs seems to be the change from 240V to 12v at each bulb. This heats up and the units fail. Would it be better to have a single transformer and use 12V LED units as designed for boats and caravans? Obviously you would have to take into account increased resistance in the wire etc but for single rooms such as the kitchen this would not be a problem.


    Sure. I replaced all the 12V mr11 halogens in my bathroom with LEDs. You JUST need to change the halogen transformer for an LED driver. It also means I've been able to seal up the holes where the spots are recessed, as they're only 1.5W each without any funky electronics, so there's very little heat.

    It's easily done for spot lighting, as a short run of DC wiring is no problem, but obviously for house-sized circuits you want AC. If you really wanted to hammer 12V I suppose you could wire up each room with it's own driver(s) for the local 12V circuit.
    • CommentAuthorTimber
    • CommentTimeFeb 3rd 2012
     
    I run LED lighting in my storage shed at the end of the garden, as well as 12 volt LED deck lighting. I have run a length of 3 core mains cable 35m down to the end of the garden, and send 12v, 5v and 0v down the wires. The LED lights in the shed and on the outside are 5 volt units, and the deck lights are 12v. There is hardly any drop in voltage over than distance with the current these units draw. I run 15 12v LED deck lights (1w each) and 4 5v light units in the shed and around it at 2w each. I run these of an ATX computer power supply. It give 10 amps on each of the 12 an 5 volt outputs.

    If you ran, say 10 4w MR16 units, the total current draw would be 3.3amps. That should be no problem for cable runs of 10m or less using some average sized cable.
    • CommentAuthorwookey
    • CommentTimeFeb 4th 2012 edited
     
    So you need to look for at least 100 Lumens per Watt from a decent quality LED? What would be a good Lumen figure from a 5W unit?


    You'e answered your own question: 500 lumens

    I notice day light and warm white units vary greatly in lumen values. Would daylight be better suited to bathrooms and warm white for living accom possibly?


    Yes, possibly, but it's a very subjective area. I like nice blue ones, which is good because they're the most efficient, but the colour does vary quite a lot between LEDS. I've had nichia 5mm, luxeon I, luxeon III, seoul P4, luxeon rebel, Cree XP-G and erm 'another one' over the last decade and they are all different. The efficiency has gone from 7.5 lm/W to 109 lm/W over those LEDs. They all work fine, but when you put two side by side the colours are often quite different.

    There really is no substitute for buying and trying. Having tried some XP-Gs I'm probably going to buy a pile more and use those. Although whilst I've been faffing new Cree LEDs have come out at 130lm/W.

    I think the right way to do it is with an LED driver unit switched by each light switch driving the LEDs in that room. I prefer constant current drivers over constant voltage drivers, but either can work with reasonable efficiency and 12V is more comon than 700mA.

    You can have a house-wide supply, but that has to run permanently so you need to be sure that its losses/efficiency are good at no-load and part load.

    Here's the lamp I've made for my workshop as a test of the design. http://wookware.org/pics/house/LEDs/ (open the pics for the comments).
    http://wookware.org/pics/house/LEDs/
    That's 750lm for 28€ at around 100lm/W, and if the driver was any good, about 90% efficiency. For 20€ I can have a meanwell driver that is 87%eff, but it wants 5 LEDs to drive. That'll be too bright at 700mA.

    Go to the candlepower forums for endless discussion of this sort of thing.

    I didn't try too hard with that unit, but I don't think it's too hard to make something quite aesthetically pleasing reasonably cheap and very efficient. I keep hoping the chinese will do it for me, but I've not seen such a thing yet. Splitting those 3 LEDs into 3 separate units would produce better spread and less shadowing in the workshop.

    I'd get better heat-sinking from using something finned like this: http://www.leds.de/en/High-Power-LEDs/High-Power-LED-accessories/Heatsink-51-x-51-for-HighPower-LED.html I might try that next.
      002-IMG_4557.JPG.medium.jpeg
      000-IMG_4553.JPG.medium.jpeg
      001-IMG_4554.JPG.medium.jpeg
    • CommentAuthorpmagowan
    • CommentTimeFeb 4th 2012
     
    You could switch the common transformer to avoid losses when the units are not on. That way your switching would remain 240V and you would have a shorter run of 12V. This would be more efficient and reduce risk of overheating at the transformer or wire. Obviously it is only possible where more than one light would be controlled by the same switch but this is usual for a string of spots.
    • CommentAuthorborpin
    • CommentTimeFeb 4th 2012 edited
     
    Whoa; 3 comments on using a bus/whole house/room 12v system. Love to know more.

    Posted By: JSHarrisI feel very similarly, to the extent that I'm going to build in a 12 V bus to my new build to run 12 V LED lighting. The 12 V MR16's I bought very cheaply from China well over a year ago have been excellent, no failures at all and a perfectly acceptable light output (although I've not measured it).
    How do you propose to do that? There was something a while ago suggesting the cable would need to be massive to cope.
    Posted By: wookeyI think the right way to do it is with an LED driver unit switched by each light switch driving the LEDs in that room. I prefer constant current drivers over constant voltage drivers, but either can work with reasonable efficiency and 12V is more comon than 700mA.
    LED 12V transformers are different to Halogen transformers.
    Posted By: pmagowanYou could switch the common transformer to avoid losses when the units are not on. That way your switching would remain 240V and you would have a shorter run of 12V. This would be more efficient and reduce risk of overheating at the transformer or wire. Obviously it is only possible where more than one light would be controlled by the same switch but this is usual for a string of spots.
    Do you mean like Wookey on a per room basis?

    I came across http://www.ledcentre.uk.com/ a while ago and they have a huge variety of transformers.
    • CommentAuthorCWatters
    • CommentTimeFeb 4th 2012
     
    Part P of the Building Regs is up for review at the moment. Some of you may wish to comment on the changes. They plan to reduce the amount of work that is notifiable but there don't seem to be any changes to the section that effects low voltage lighting (technically 12V lighting is Extra Low Voltage or ELV).

    Currently 230V lighting isn't notifiable. However ELV lighting was made notifiable (unless preqwired) when Part P was introduced. That was because 12V halogens draw such a lot of current they can be a fire risk if the wrong size wire is used. LED lighting shouldn't really be any more dangerous than 230V lighting so should be allowed in my opinion...

    http://www.communities.gov.uk/publications/planningandbuilding/brconsultationsection3
    • CommentAuthorpmagowan
    • CommentTimeFeb 4th 2012
     
    12V can be a problem if done incorrectly. I read up about it when rewiring a boat. Essentially, in lay terms, 12V finds it harder to go down the wire and thus it heats up. This is related to the load. i.e. If you have a large load you will ned a thicker wire to power it in 12V. LED lighting is a very small load (why I was investigating it for a boat with battery for power). So if you only use it for this the wiring does not have to be substantial. On my boat I can leave every light on for a week and still have battery power left whereas with a normal bulb it would just take one bulb a few days to run the battery flat.
    I did use special wire with a fire quenching coating and I sized it for a less than 3% volt drop over the runs. In a house I don't think you would need to worry much as decent lighting cable would likely be sufficient for all but the longest 1 room runs. You can also get 12V circuit breakers for safety.
    •  
      CommentAuthorJSHarris
    • CommentTimeFeb 4th 2012
     
    The cable size for 12 V lighting using LEDs can be quite modest. Normal lighting circuit cable would be either 1 mm² or 1.5 mm² I believe, depending on the length of run. 1 mm² is rated at 11 A buried in a wall, 1.5 mm² is rated at 14 A buried in a wall (both have higher ratings if clipped to a surface).

    A 5 W LED draws about 0.417 A, so up to 26 of them could be operated on a single run of 1 mm², or up to 33 of them on a run of 1.5 mm².

    I'm planning to fit mains light switches as normal, but have them power on switched mode power supplies that drive the low voltage light bus for that part of the room. These power supplies are cheap and efficient, I've just ordered a couple of small ones to test and they were only around £5 each.
    • CommentAuthorpmagowan
    • CommentTimeFeb 4th 2012
     
    I might copy you JSH when I eventually get round to my internal works. I have taken a dislike to the CFL's (mini or otherwise) and have been very impressed with the LED's I used on the boat (in pretty damp, salty and vibration high conditions). They draw so little power and provide so much light and last so well that they seem the obvious choice. The problem up to now, as your post mortum shows, is the transformer electronics which your method gets around.
    • CommentAuthorEd Davies
    • CommentTimeFeb 4th 2012
     
    Posted By: JSHarrisA 5 W LED draws about 0.417 A, so up to 26 of them could be operated on a single run of 1 mm², or up to 33 of them on a run of 1.5 mm².


    It's a bit of an extreme case but if you do run 11 A down 1 mm² cable you'll get significant voltage drops.

    Electrical resistivity of copper is 16.78 nΩ·m [1] so two-way resistance of 1 mm² would be 0.03356 Ω/m so 0.36916 V/m drop.


    [1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copper#cite_ref-0
    •  
      CommentAuthorJSHarris
    • CommentTimeFeb 4th 2012 edited
     
    <blockquote><cite>Posted By: Ed Davies</cite>

    It's a bit of an extreme case but if you do run 11 A down 1 mm² cable you'll get significant voltage drops.

    Electrical resistivity of copper is 16.78 nΩ·m [1] so two-way resistance of 1 mm² would be 0.03356 Ω/m so 0.36916 V/m drop.


    [1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copper#cite_ref-0</blockquote>

    True, but as you suggest, running twenty six 5 W LEDs on a single cable run is probably a bit extreme!

    I'd guess most people wouldn't have more than maybe 10 of them on a single cable run, most would probably use a lot fewer per run. Using 1 mm² they'd get about 0.183 V drop per metre for ten 5 W LEDs, which seems tolerably low to me. Upping the cable size to 1.5 mm² reduces this drop to 0.081 V/m, so even a 5 m run would only lose around 0.4 V, or about 3.4 %

    In my case the power supplies will be as close as I can reasonably get them to the lights (allowing for the need to get to them for replacement), so the runs of low voltage cable will be short, probably no more than a 4 or 5 metres at most. If push comes to shove I may just star wire the LEDs back to the power supply, virtually eliminating the voltage drop by reducing it to sub-1% levels.
    • CommentAuthorpmagowan
    • CommentTimeFeb 4th 2012
     
    Yes and on a boat a less than 3% volt drop is only speced for critical equipment such as emergency VHF. Other equipment is happy with 10% IIRC. So in a domestic situation you would be fine. Also it is not that difficult to run a 1.5 cable. Really the risk is overloaded cable an then fire which should be almost impossible with reasonably sensible wiring and a circuit breaker IMO.
    • CommentAuthorwookey
    • CommentTimeFeb 5th 2012
     
    Cable resistance is largely irrelevant if you use constant-current supplies. With a 700mA supply you get 700mA down the cable however many LEDs you use - just the voltage changes, and will rise a smidgen to cover cable losses if needed. If you put in more than 12 LEDs in one run then you won't be in 'low voltage' (<50V) territory any more. (You'll also have about 3000 lm which is an awful lot).

    JSH I'd like to know where you get efficient drivers for £5. I've seen plenty of rather crappy drivers for that sort of money. (I've got one (12V) which claims to be 12W, but can't actually reliably start two 6W LED strips, and is only 60% efficient).

    And "A 5 W LED draws about 0.417 A," is simplistic, or at least not stating your assumptions. That's true at 12V. Plenty of 24V LEDs around and in fact the LEDs themselves are almost always 3.6V, except for some multi-die devices.

    It would appear that our schemes are identical - mains to each room and light switch, switching driver unit to supply low-voltage circuit to room lights. The only difference is that you are wiring up at 12V in parallel. I am wiring up at 700mA in series. 12V gives you more choice of luminaires and driver units. 700mA (should) give you better efficiency, it's easier to know what LEDs you are getting, and it's trivial to make your own.

    A set of lights for the a living room (say 5 LEDs for ~1000 lumens) is 4.5€ for LED, 1€ for heat sink, £0.50 for diffuser. so that's €6 each for the lamps and another £10 or so for a decent driver. So that's £40 or so for the lot. There's still lots of people selling 1 module for more than that.

    These look interesting: 680mA CC driver for 3 LEDs $5(!). http://www.dealextreme.com/p/9w-led-driver-circuit-input-85-265v-output-10-11v-680ma-42830 No quoted efficiency

    These look better (efficiency >85%) but only 350mA models (fine but you need more LED units at a £6 each for same amount of light), and need to get a price: http://en.skyworthlighting.com/product-default-75.html
    • CommentAuthorborpin
    • CommentTimeFeb 5th 2012
     
    Posted By: wookeyCable resistance is largely irrelevant if you use constant-current supplies.
    This is the bit I am not really sure of. How do you know whether it is Constant Current or Voltage and does this change with the type of LED you use? These for instance, http://www.ledcentre.uk.com/238-12v-transformers-led-power-supplies/178-led-transformer-/-power-supply-30w-12v-dc-2.50a-waterproof.html current or voltage (I'm guessing current). Could you wire up a number of LEDs to this one transformer?

    As I in new build territory, I need to be sure the scheme is something the sparky is happy with and buying transformers off Ebay probably won't wash as he has to sign the installation off!
    •  
      CommentAuthorJSHarris
    • CommentTimeFeb 5th 2012 edited
     
    Cable loss is cable loss, whether you have CC or CV drive makes not a jot of difference, the power wasted in the cable is the same. The only difference is that the CC drive automatically compensates by upping the voltage at the drive end, something you could do by just turning up the voltage trimmer on a CV unit.

    The majority of the SM PSUs I've bought so far (mainly Meanwells and Meanwell clones for charging big battery packs) have been around 90% efficient. The exceptions are some small single LED SM CC units I bought from China that struggled to get to 80% (but these were low voltage, 3.7V, torch driver devices) and a few single LED 12 V input 800 mA CC devices that I think were intended for incorporation in the base of things like MR16s. Oddly enough I bought some cheap 800 mA (ex-Petzl caving light) drivers from ebay that aren't switched mode, they are simple PWM and they are more efficient than the cheap Chinese SM drivers.

    I've ordered a couple of smaller SM supplies just to see how good (or bad) they are. If they are like the Meanwell ones I have (and the Meanwell clones that seem so common from China) then they will probably be OK.

    I've made a few LED lights now, bike lights, a reading light, a couple of torches, a bedside light and the 12 V lighting system in my workshop. Based on that limited experience it seems that the multi-LED units are generally more efficient than the single LED units, which is one reason I want to try the LED strip lighting idea. The Cree and Lumiled 3W LEDs I've used all run pretty hot and need good heat sinks, whereas the 72 LED 12 V MR16s barely get warm. In terms of light output it's hard to compare, because the single emitters look much brighter, mainly because they are a point source. The difference in colour temperature also makes a big difference to apparent brightness, and there seems to be a very wide variation in this with the "warm white" units.
   
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