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Led Lighting

Led Lights An LED light bulb can last you up to 100,000 hours compared to 8,000 for compact fluorescent and 1,000 for a incandescent. That averages out to 12 hours of light per day for 12 years. LED light bulbs are so energy efficient that, depending on how often you have them on, they'll actually pay for themselves in just over a year.

The best way to conserve energy is to use less of it. LED light bulbs are directional - which means that they only put the light where you aim it or where you need it.

Incandescent bulbs, on the other hand, just sit there and throw their glow all over the place - wasting electricity and generating heat.

LED light bulbs run cool, so they're safer to use than fragile, burning hot halogen and incandescent bulbs. LEDs turn on instantly - which has been a big benefit in car brake lights and is also a welcome feature when testing lights in a dark basement.

LEDs do not use mercury like CFLs - so disposal concerns aren't the same.

LED light bulbs bring a white light into a room. Unlike the yellow light we're so used to seeing from incandescent bulbs, the white light cast by

LEDs is closer to the color temperature of daylight. The white light of

LEDs is easier on your eyes and also provides the added benefit of lifting your mood in the summer and winter time. The white light also mixes in wonderfully with ordinary lights around your home or workplace, and it's a great light to read by.

Cost Saving using Led

This comparison is the energy saving replacing a 60 watt incandescent light bulb with an equivalent LED light with a cost of 10 cents a kilowatt hour.

Your cost per year for 60 watt = $37.00

Cost for equivalent LED = $3.70

Saving per Year using LED = $33.30

If you have 20 lights in your house =$666 saving per year

This does not take into consideration that the LED will operate 12 years at an operating time of 12 hours per day.