tmbrown97
Senior Member
Keep in mind guys, that just because you use HAI, you're not stuck with HAI dimmers for UPB. Even going with the HLC protocol, this can be one with other manufacturer's switches, including the Simply Automated ones which work great. I have 60+ of them with all varieties of LED bulbs numbering from just a single to up to 9 bulbs per switch. I've seen very few bulbs that have issues; the majority I've tested from Cree, Utilitech, Phillips, Sylvania - all seem fine; there was a 3-pack from Costco that was bad, but that's it. They also all dim pretty well too.
As far as bulbs, I know a lot of people moved away from the cold cathode bulbs because they still contain mercury requiring careful disposal, and there have actually been recent studies about CFL's putting out dangerous levels of UV radiation among other cancer risks. Even before these recent studies, I recall a few places announcing specific plans to stop carrying Cold Cathode bulbs though I never dug into why at the time.
So far, in the range of very affordable bulbs, the Home Depot Cree's seem to take the cake - they are very natural looking in the fixtures, work inside enclosed fixtures (many are not approved for wet or enclosed!) and are quite affordable - a lot of areas are subsidizing the cost... the 40W warm white one just dropped under $5/bulb at my local Home Depot; and the TrueWhite high CRI bulbs are $8/$10 for 40W/60W equivs (for me the 40W's were brighter than the 60W incandescents they replaced). They're the best color I've seen in energy-efficient bulbs so far.
As far as bulbs, I know a lot of people moved away from the cold cathode bulbs because they still contain mercury requiring careful disposal, and there have actually been recent studies about CFL's putting out dangerous levels of UV radiation among other cancer risks. Even before these recent studies, I recall a few places announcing specific plans to stop carrying Cold Cathode bulbs though I never dug into why at the time.
So far, in the range of very affordable bulbs, the Home Depot Cree's seem to take the cake - they are very natural looking in the fixtures, work inside enclosed fixtures (many are not approved for wet or enclosed!) and are quite affordable - a lot of areas are subsidizing the cost... the 40W warm white one just dropped under $5/bulb at my local Home Depot; and the TrueWhite high CRI bulbs are $8/$10 for 40W/60W equivs (for me the 40W's were brighter than the 60W incandescents they replaced). They're the best color I've seen in energy-efficient bulbs so far.