I Bin Therbefor
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- Jan 12, 2012
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I get a weekly newletter from Co.Design Newsletters which had an interesting article on LEDs. In part, this article says:
"Those who’ve purchased LED lamps will find that the numbers on the box can lie. Such figures are based on technical estimates by the LED manufacturers themselves, not the companies sticking the LEDs into lamps and other fittings. LEDs are so tiny and power efficient that they can fit in almost any design you could imagine, but these same designs end up roasting the lights in their own heat. So lights that promise to last decades on the box--an environmental coup in terms of waste and energy savings--will degrade quickly, grow dim within a few years (or even months), and their color temperature shifts."
The article goes on to say:
“LEDs are semi conductors,” . . . “and semiconductors are used in computers. And the way they (The computer industy) cooled semiconductors in computers was using heat pipes.”
Simple question for the Viper design team, are you cooling the LEDs properly?
"Those who’ve purchased LED lamps will find that the numbers on the box can lie. Such figures are based on technical estimates by the LED manufacturers themselves, not the companies sticking the LEDs into lamps and other fittings. LEDs are so tiny and power efficient that they can fit in almost any design you could imagine, but these same designs end up roasting the lights in their own heat. So lights that promise to last decades on the box--an environmental coup in terms of waste and energy savings--will degrade quickly, grow dim within a few years (or even months), and their color temperature shifts."
The article goes on to say:
“LEDs are semi conductors,” . . . “and semiconductors are used in computers. And the way they (The computer industy) cooled semiconductors in computers was using heat pipes.”
Simple question for the Viper design team, are you cooling the LEDs properly?