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bsloan1960
07-27-2023, 12:59 PM
All exposed bulbs in our house- including the handing fixture over the table have yellow filament screw-in bulbs. We need to replace one. I've never seen these before. There is no wattage or other information stamped on the bulb. Are these incandescent? Are they a common Walmart/Lowes item? How do I find the wattage?

Thanks!

retiredguy123
07-27-2023, 01:04 PM
You can try this:

Search with an image saved on your device
On your Android phone or tablet, open the Google app .
At the bottom, tap Discover.
In the search bar, tap Google Lens .
Take or upload a photo to use for your search:
To take a photo: Point to an object with your camera and tap Search .
To upload an existing image: Tap Photo picker and select a photo.
Select the area you want to use for your search:
Use an object in the image: If available, on the object, tap Select .
Use part of an image: Tap Select image area , then drag the corners of the box around your selection.
At the bottom, scroll to find your search results.
To refine your search, tap Add to your search. Then, enter keywords.
Tip: To get more specific results, select a smaller area on the image.

retiredguy123
07-27-2023, 01:24 PM
All exposed bulbs in our house- including the handing fixture over the table have yellow filament screw-in bulbs. We need to replace one. I've never seen these before. There is no wattage or other information stamped on the bulb. Are these incandescent? Are they a common Walmart/Lowes item? How do I find the wattage?

Thanks!
It would be very unusual for the wattage to not be somewhere on the bulb. It can be on the glass or on the metal part. If you have more than one bulb, I would inspect them all very carefully.

BobnBev
07-27-2023, 06:02 PM
Tale one out to ACE Hardware. They will tell you all you need to know.

Mleeja
07-27-2023, 08:23 PM
You can get them at Lowe’s or Home Depot. They are expensive. Also try Ace. Probably more expensive, but their service will be great in getting the correct replacement.

villagetinker
07-27-2023, 09:04 PM
These sound like LED bulbs where the LEDs are arranged to look like old style filaments and to glow with a yellowish light, I have seen these at Lowe's. Take a bulb in with you to get a match. One word of caution, if the yellowish lights are like the white LED lights, you may find a slight color difference, so you may find it necessary to replace all of the lamps to get exact matches.

retiredguy123
07-28-2023, 06:03 AM
Amazon has several LED yellow filament bulbs.

Keefelane66
07-29-2023, 09:10 AM
Next week we will no longer be able to purchase incandescent light bulbs
Light bulb ban: DOE's ban on incandescent lightbulbs goes into effect (https://www.newsnationnow.com/business/tech/incandescent-light-bulb-ban-august/)

golfing eagles
07-29-2023, 09:23 AM
Next week we will no longer be able to purchase incandescent light bulbs
Light bulb ban: DOE's ban on incandescent lightbulbs goes into effect (https://www.newsnationnow.com/business/tech/incandescent-light-bulb-ban-august/)

Really?????

Let me guess, by using more electricity they contribute to the myth of "global warming". Score another victory for the eco-weenies and the puppet masters that will cash in from this ridiculous narrative.

Doctor Who
07-29-2023, 01:00 PM
Make sure if you have a dimmer on your light that you buy the led's that are dimmable.
If no dimmer attachment just buy regular led's......a difference in price.

retiredguy123
07-29-2023, 01:10 PM
Make sure if you have a dimmer on your light that you buy the led's that are dimmable.
If no dimmer attachment just buy regular led's......a difference in price.
Call me crazy, but I always buy dimmable LED bulbs, regardless of where I am using them. I think they are better.

Two Bills
07-29-2023, 01:34 PM
Next week we will no longer be able to purchase incandescent light bulbs
Light bulb ban: DOE's ban on incandescent lightbulbs goes into effect (https://www.newsnationnow.com/business/tech/incandescent-light-bulb-ban-august/)

They banned then years ago in UK.
I can still buy them on internet if I wanted to.
I like the LED's now though, and they do last a whole lot longer.

NoMo50
07-30-2023, 07:22 AM
Those are LED bulbs. The bulb should have its information on the glass, just above the metal base. This sounds like the bulbs used in the clear fixtures in our house. The info on my bulbs is:

Satco S21713 LED A19
7.5W 2700K (warm white)
800 Lumens

Amazon carries these exact bulbs...about $4.50 each. In the nearly 3 years We have been in our house, I've only had to replace one.

DAVES
07-30-2023, 07:56 AM
Simple practical to do. Bulbs have an average life. That is true for whatever the bulb is tungsten, halogen, led, florescent of whatever. A typical fixture may have several bulbs. Take one bulb out.
It is counterclockwise to remove. Determine the bulb base, bulb shape, is it on a dimmer? and replace all of them. We've all done it. You have a chandelier, you drag out the ladder and replace one bulb. It is unlikely it will exactly match the others and the others will fail shortly. LED bulbs come in different colors of light. Daylight, warm-white etc, what you prefer is a matter of opinion.
My OPINION the daylight is too blue for me. Dimmers and led bulbs. They are not all compatible.
They are easy to change and not very expensive. Unlike tungsten bulbs LEDS do not get warmer, more yellow/orange when you dim them..

DAVES
07-30-2023, 08:12 AM
Call me crazy, but I always buy dimmable LED bulbs, regardless of where I am using them. I think they are better.

Like everything else is a matter of opinion. I have no way to test it but, it seems to me that the LEDS that are not on dimmers and I have installed the non-dim able bulbs last longer. Guaranteed life? Some say 50,000 hours or whatever. No one keeps track of it. I have three CREE bulbs in our outside light. They are 9 years old and still working HOURS say 10 a day 365 days a year for 9 years 32850 hours. I've had others that last like 6 months.

Saving electricity-perhaps, but I have a bag full of LED bulbs that have failed. The issue seems to be not enough cooling around the bulb built in power supply.

DAVES
07-30-2023, 08:24 AM
They banned then years ago in UK.
I can still buy them on internet if I wanted to.
I like the LED's now though, and they do last a whole lot longer.

Far as UK sort of a different world. Our constitution actually rejects a lot of what is UK. A long intertwined history.

In terms of electricity We run 110 60 cycle. UK is 220 and I think 50 cycle.

retiredguy123
07-30-2023, 09:05 AM
Like everything else is a matter of opinion. I have no way to test it but, it seems to me that the LEDS that are not on dimmers and I have installed the non-dim able bulbs last longer. Guaranteed life? Some say 50,000 hours or whatever. No one keeps track of it. I have three CREE bulbs in our outside light. They are 9 years old and still working HOURS say 10 a day 365 days a year for 9 years 32850 hours. I've had others that last like 6 months.

Saving electricity-perhaps, but I have a bag full of LED bulbs that have failed. The issue seems to be not enough cooling around the bulb built in power supply.
I agree that it is a matter of opinion. But, for what it's worth, GE claims that their 60-watt equivalent dimmable bulbs and their 60-watt non-dimmable bulbs will both last 13 years. Personally, I think that as prices decrease, the non-dimmable LED bulbs will disappear from the marketplace. Even today, the price difference is small.

villagetinker
07-30-2023, 03:11 PM
Back in 2013 CREE was advertising LED bulbs with 10 year warranty (free replacement!!), I bought about 2 dozen bulbs, and got rid of the all of the 130 volt incandescent bulbs. Over the years, I have replaced (for FREE) 3 or 4 bulbs. As noted above, I have lots of hours on these bulbs, and are very happy with them. As far as I know CREE no longer is in the household bulb business, and the quality of the bulbs from the big box stores has improved significantly. Many are on dimmers, and i do not recall having a personal problems with compatibility, but I have seen neighbors with problems, so I always buy LEDs that state they can be dimmed.