nmeyrick
Well-Known Member
I'm looking to replace our interior light bulbs without changing the fittings, and I can see there are a whole slew of previous threads on the topic but as the technology is moving so fast I thought best to ask what recent experience people have. I currently have a number of 21w 12V bayonet bulbs marked 1142 12v 21cp in a teak backed mounting similar to this:
http://www.seamarknunn.com/acatalog/info_ES1278PK.html
These are used for general area lighting, and have a glass diffuser infront of the bulb and a metal reflector behind. I'm looking to replace the bulbs with a similarly rated warm white LED, and have seen many places do a bayonet adaptor to which you can then fit a flat card assembly with all the LEDs facing downwards.
Does anyone have experience of using these? It seems to be a more efficient approach than using a round bulb replacement, but I don't know whether the result would be a spotlight rather than diffused area lighting.
I also have a small number of 20W G4 halogen downlighters which I would like to LED at the same time
Can anyone recommend a good source of warm light bulbs to suit this setup? I'd rather not pay a fortune but at the same time don't want cheapo ones that fail.
Thanks
Neil
http://www.seamarknunn.com/acatalog/info_ES1278PK.html
These are used for general area lighting, and have a glass diffuser infront of the bulb and a metal reflector behind. I'm looking to replace the bulbs with a similarly rated warm white LED, and have seen many places do a bayonet adaptor to which you can then fit a flat card assembly with all the LEDs facing downwards.
Does anyone have experience of using these? It seems to be a more efficient approach than using a round bulb replacement, but I don't know whether the result would be a spotlight rather than diffused area lighting.
I also have a small number of 20W G4 halogen downlighters which I would like to LED at the same time
Can anyone recommend a good source of warm light bulbs to suit this setup? I'd rather not pay a fortune but at the same time don't want cheapo ones that fail.
Thanks
Neil