Author Topic: GE battery powered fluorescent "picture light"  (Read 2728 times)
themaritimegirl
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GE battery powered fluorescent "picture light" « on: January 13, 2013, 12:58:35 PM » Author: themaritimegirl
Anybody ever see one of these before? It would appear they took the guts from their 8 AA closet light and stuffed it in a fancy brass enclosure you hang on the wall.

Take a look .
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Re: GE battery powered fluorescent "picture light" « Reply #1 on: January 30, 2013, 01:19:06 AM » Author: arcblue
I think you are correct. Battery life and lamp life will be very disappointing. This is one fixture where LEDs would be a much better choice. Cold cathode fluorescent would also be good.
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Re: GE battery powered fluorescent "picture light" « Reply #2 on: March 29, 2013, 11:48:02 PM » Author: themaritimegirl
Apparently forum replies are not emailed...

I wonder why CCFL technology is not taking off? To me it seems like the ultimate lighting technology. Long life, and I once read that they are more efficient than LEDs.
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dor123
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Re: GE battery powered fluorescent "picture light" « Reply #3 on: March 30, 2013, 01:38:49 AM » Author: dor123
As cold cathode fluorescent lamp, don't relys on thermionic emission, no emissive coating on the electrodes is required. This results in the electrodes totally immune to starting (They haven't a filament shape), so the life is much longer.
The problem is that cold cathode fluorescent lamps, are less efficient than hot cathode fluorescent lamps. I don't know why.
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« Last Edit: March 30, 2013, 01:40:55 AM by dor123 » Logged

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Re: GE battery powered fluorescent "picture light" « Reply #4 on: March 30, 2013, 03:27:44 AM » Author: Medved
I once read that they are more efficient than LEDs.

This is not the case anymore, LED's efficacy already exceeded the small fluorescents.

The CCFL use was confined to lower power illumination, requiring longer, thin tubes (TV/monitor backlights), frequent switching (advertisements) and/or where custom shapes are required (advertisements).
The useful life of the tubes is way longer with frequent switching than the ones with hot cathodes, but the reliability of the ballasts in small format (retrofits for incandescents) become way worse than the hot cathode lamps (it require really high voltage in multi-kV range), so the ballast tend to limit the useful life.
Moreover the CCFL ballast is way more complex (mainly due to the need of the high voltage), what make it way more expensive.

On the other hand the cold cathodes make the CCFL ideal for custom shape tubing, where the lamps are made manually, because they are quite robust in handling (no sensitive coat), need only the basic gas cleanup, but do not need the tricky and quite sensitive step of cathode activation necessary for hot electrodes, what could be practically made only using an automated machinery.

But even there the LED's are slowly taking over, as their dot format allow greater design flexibility and lack of HV and fragile glass tubing make the assemblies way easier to build and handle.
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