Incandescent Lamp Ban?
What This Means, How to Handle It
New file 8/24/2008
This article is in reference to USA Federal legislation that will ban
*SOME* *but not all* household incandescent lamps in two stages in 2012
and 2014.
The news is not all that bad, except maybe for California which has its
own restrictions and plans for more.
The good news is that the USA Federal 2012/2014 bans have a lot of
exemptions.
The portion of the ban scheduled to go into effect in 2012 affects household
lightbulbs with light output around that of 75 and 100 watt ordinary "standard"
incandescents, and on the low side of output typical of 150 watt ones.
The portion of the ban scheduled to go in effect in 2014 affects light bulbs
with output typical or on the low side of usual for ones of 40 and 60 watts.
EXEMPTED FROM THIS BAN:
1. Light Bulbs for Designed Usage at Voltages Over 130 or Less Than 110
Volts:
- Flashlight lamps
- Automotive bulbs
- 28 and 14 volt aircraft bulbs
- Bicycle light bulbs
- Most vehicle light bulbs in general
- Nearly all electronic equipment indicator lamps
- Most halogen lamps 35 watts or less
- Nearly all halogen bulbs 20 watts or less
- All other low voltage lamps in general
- 230, 240, and 277 volt lightbulbs
2. Light Bulbs Outside a Certain Range of Light Output
- Incandescent lamps producing (at 120V) less than 310 lumens (slightly
more than all common 25 watt 120V lightbulbs)
This exception includes all common exit sign lamps, night light bulbs,
indicator lamps and other 120V incandescents of wattage 25 watts or less.
- Incandescents producing (at 120V) more than 2600 lumens (slightly less
than the output of a "soft white" 120V 150W 750 hour lightbulb)
This includes most photographic, projector, and stage lighting lamps.
3. Light Bulbs Exceeding an Energy Efficiency Standard
- Ones producing at least as much light as a "usual 100 watt light bulb"
(I somewhat think at least 1600 lumens) with no more than 72 watts of power
- Ones producing at least as much light as a "usual 75 watt light bulb"
(I somewhat think at least 1100 lumens) with no more than 53 watts of power
- Ones producing at least as much light as a "usual 60 watt light bulb"
(I somewhat think at least 800 lumens) with no more than 43 watts of power
- Ones producing at least as much light as a "usual 40 watt light bulb"
(I somewhat think at least 440 lumens) with no more than 29 watts of power
Incandescent lamps that meet this energy efficiency standard are already on the
market. These include the Philips "Halogena Energy Saver" 40 and 70 watt (60
and 100 watt equivalent respectively), already available at Home Depot. Similar
GE light bulbs and ones of other wattages are already in the works.
4. Ones With Bases Other Than E26/E27 "Medium Screw"/"Edison Screw"
This exemption from the ban includes most projector lamps, exit sign bulbs, and
many decorative and low voltage bulbs and indicator lamps, whether or not they
are excluded from the ban for other reasons.
The 40 watt "intermediate screw" "high intensity" bulb that is about the size
of a ping pong ball is also excluded on this basis.
MR11 and MR16 pin-base units are exempted on this basis, whether or not
they qualify for exemption on basis of low voltage or "specialty lamp".
5. Many Specialty Types
Specifically *NOT EXEMPTED* from the ban on this basis:
- "Modified Spectum" such as GE's "Reveal" and other neodymium bulb lamps
Exempted from the ban on this basis:
- appliance
- black light
- bug
- coloured
- infrared
- left-hand thread (used where lamps may be stolen)
- marine / marine signal
- mine service
- plant light
- reflector (including BR, PAR and R type floodlights and spotlights)
- rough service / shatter-resistant / vibration service
- sign
- silver bowl (reflectorized over the tip hemisphere of the bulb)
- showcase
- 3-way
- traffic signal
- G & T shape (includes most refrigerator lamps and "globular" /spherical
"vanity light" bulbs often used in home bathrooms)
- AB, BA, CA, F, G16-1/2, G-25, G30, S and M-14
S includes most theater marquee lamps.
F includes most flame-shaped decorative lamps of affected wattages.
Credit To:
Paul Eldridge, for posting most of this in a January 18 2008 posting in
the Usenet newsgroup alt.home.repair, in article (message ID)
<2n12p3hhhjb104qjfuhvnf2o8r39ldmpi6@4ax.com>
Written by Don Klipstein.
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