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Do You Turn Off LED Bulbs?
I have a 50-watt equivalent LED light bulb in my living room table lamp, that actually only uses 7 watts of power. I used to turn off the lamp whenever I left the house. But, I recently calculated that I could leave the lamp on for 12 hours every day and it would only cost $2.75 in electricity for the entire year. So, I no longer turn off the lamp when I leave the house. It still feels weird though and my parents are probably turning over in their graves. Do you always turn off LED bulbs when you leave a room or the house?
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Yes
Thinking I am conditioned not to waste electricity. |
I set up my Philips Hue bulbs with the IFTTT app to turn on at 15 minutes before sunset, and shut off at 11:30P. The front room lights start at 100% and drop to 50% at sunset We have them on in the rooms we don't use because it's so economical. It gives the illusion of someone being home, even when we're not. When we installed the LED landscape lights, the electrician told us if we run them 4-6 hrs. a night, it's around $15 a year.
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I don't think I could re-train myself to NOT turn the lights off when I leave a room or leave the house.
We do have smart bulbs that we turn on and off either remotely or via programs to give the illusions we're home. |
I still keep trying to turn off the lights all the time, but it’s often the solar tubes. I always turn off all lights not being used, even the electric sipping LED’s. It comes from a lifetime of conditioning.
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since we can't store electricity on a massive scale, and since every system has a maximum, generation output, and since most of the electricity is not created from renewable sources, shutting the lights off when not needed will help conserve the generation material which is being used to create the electricity. Our resources are not unlimited.
but then its a free country, so with enough money you can do whatever you want to do, |
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61320 watts === 61.320 kilowatts per year 61.320 kilowatts x $0.15 per kw = $9.20 per year (if on 24 hours) Same math for 12 hours = $4.60 per year I use $0.15 per kw because I also include base fees and other fees. Take total bill and divide by total kw for that number. |
Fixed income requires all my Lamps and Lights to be turned off… LED is the reason I can enjoy a couple 2 for 1 drinks at Cody’s …
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What is especially SHOCKING to me is the OP, who is a regular poster known for his frugality, is willing to spend an additional $2.75 a year. Thanks to proper mathematics by TrapX Retiredguy has been given the real cost of leaving the LED on.
So the real question is will Retiredguy now shut off his light? We are talking real money now, nearly TEN dollars annually. Retiredguy: don't risk your hard fought reputation as a cheapskate, shut off that light! |
Why not? It's not a lot of work, they serve no purpose while I sleep - well, some people feel they act as a thief deterrent if you program them to go on and off and if someone is up and walking around.
Someone calculated 64kw per year. So, if 100 million homes left on the LEDs that would add up to 6.4 Billion watts. That is about the amount of 2 - 500 Megawatt coal fired power plants that we could shut down. Every little bit helps. |
It's in my DNA to turn off that light!
I've gotten calls from friends who see the light bulb in the doorbell is on and call me to alert me that I'm spending (wasting) my money! They missed that the light pole in front of the house is blazing all night. :1rotfl::1rotfl::1rotfl: |
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7 watts/1000 x $0.089879/kwh x 12 hours/day x 365 days = $2.75 According to the Leesburg Electric Company, this is the total additional cost to my bill for using a 7 watt light bulb. So, I don't see any reason to add the fixed costs that are applied to every bill regardless of your consumption. |
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Note that this thread was posted in "just for fun". But, I do find it amazing that some people are still using incandescent light bulbs. |
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Now that know the real cost, I’ll be shutting mine off. :faint: |
Been conditioned over the years not to waste energy, so, I would turn it off.
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61.32 x $.0898732 = $5.51. So, Retiredguy, as a recipient of the Retiredguy "You're Cheap!" Award (a distinction that I am very proud of) is over FIVE dollars enough to shut off the light? |
On a related note, did anyone figure the electrical usage for all those green lights that glow on microwaves, computers, charging devices, clocks on appliances, lights that glow on garages door openers.
I remember reading once those earlier appliances took a lot of electric power just standing-by. I swear when I walk around the house at night, I don't need any additional lighting. |
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They can save significant money and cut down on pollution by buying a battery-powered lawnmower. And trading that old gas-guzzling golf car for an electric model. And riding around the local Village area on a bicycle or E-bike. Then go all the way with a hybrid or electric car or truck. That would save several thousand times the energy as compared with if you do or do not switch off your LED bulbs. It is just a big picture or a small picture situation. |
My other half just cannot walk past a light switch without turning it off. He also tries to turn off the light from the solar tubes. It's built into our age group.
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After converting our kitchen overhead lights into LEDs, I opted to leave the one(single) over the sink, on(constantly).
Well, that worked, until after I realized they still burn out, and had to replace it. So, I've now decided to turn it off at night. The cost for wattage may be cheap, but the replacement isn't. |
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My thoughts are simple, ecologically it's better to turn them off and it means more money for my grandchildren. I have an outside strip of 5 watt bulbs . , About $5 a month, I use a light sensor and save $$$$ yearly . We can't do every thing, but do try
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As one person said , get a smart led bulb, now under $5 and let it turn itself on and off. 25-50000 hours life, it could a decade before you need a year one.
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Yep
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Clap on clap off. THE CLAPPER. Remember those?
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She brought home almost all the stuff she sold and almost all was a one and done. Only good thing was the Ginzu knives which were pretty good and somewhere along the line disappeared. |
Why not turn off or at least dim all the street lighting after about 10 pm?? Think about all the lighted road signs that run all night. And when do the squares shut down lighting?
How about the giant villages signs on the cart bridges? Lots of ways to save power and trim costs We are all paying for these power bills somehow in fees or taxes |
OMG join a club,find something to do…..get a life!!!!!
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That might be for the energy only, and does not include a delivery fee, and roughly 15% in taxes. Those would apply to incremental usage calcs |
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Maybe time to reconsider?
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k. |
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----- There has been a veritable explosion in the number of electronics, appliances, and other equipment plugged into, or permanently connected to, America’s homes—65 devices on average in our study. Most are consuming electricity around-the-clock, even when the owners are not using them or think they have been turned off. This always-on energy use by inactive devices translates to approximately $19 billion a year—about $165 per U.s. household on average—and 50 large (500-megawatt) power plants’ worth of electricity. https://www.nrdc.org/sites/default/f...le-load-IP.pdf |
We converted every lamp in our house from the original (130v incandescent) to LED back in 2013, bought Cree LED lamps with a 10 year warranty (actually had 3 replaced!), and we continue to turn off unused lights to this day. Several are on timers or other automated controls, the rest are manual. We also have several LED nightlights for late evening trips to the bathroom or fridge.
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