If anyone is interested There is a loophole in the law which allows Rough service lightbulbs to still be sold. These are incandescents which were designed to be a little tougher primarily to survive longer in an industrial environment but in all other ways identical to those sold for home use I think they are available in 60 and 100 watts but there might be some 40's floating around as well
Thanks, yes hopefully that can continue...and would hardly upset any EU savings strategy, though no doubt they will still pedantically keep trying to stop the sales to those who make the effort to get them.
Hi there would you mind sharing which blog platform you're working with? I'm looking to start my own blog in the near future but I'm having a tough time deciding between BlogEngine/Wordpress/B2evolution and Drupal. The reason I ask is because your design and style seems different then most blogs and I'm looking for something completely unique. P.S Sorry for getting off-topic but I had to ask! my page - alternate energy
Oddly, unlike most spam, the solar energy blog linked to seems good enough with genuine posts by different people (though I know sometimes genuine content is lifted and copied in to new sites etc).
Otherwise, the reason for allowing this through here, is in the rather amusing question about blog platform since it's so obviously Blogspot (freedomlightbulb.blogspot.com), and for that matter Greenwashing Lamps in the post is so obviously Wordpress (greenwashinglamps.wordpress.com) ;-)
I never knew that the different lamp types could be broken down into families like this. I found it interesting that incandescent lamps and luminescent lamps are the two main families and that everything else fits under them. I do agree that the incandescent light has a lot more soul and warmth. I prefer them in my home.
5 comments:
If anyone is interested There is a loophole in the law which allows Rough service lightbulbs to still be sold. These are incandescents which were designed to be a little tougher primarily to survive longer in an industrial environment but in all other ways identical to those sold for home use I think they are available in 60 and 100 watts but there might be some 40's floating around as well
Thanks, yes hopefully that can continue...and would hardly upset any EU savings strategy, though no doubt they will still pedantically keep trying to stop the sales to those who make the effort to get them.
You may be interested in the post a few days ago on the availability of the rough service bulbs using UK as main example :
EU Distributors Clarify: Candle, Golf Ball and other Incandescents also to Stay Available
Hi there would you mind sharing which blog platform you're working with? I'm
looking to start my own blog in the near future but I'm having a tough time deciding between BlogEngine/Wordpress/B2evolution and Drupal. The reason I ask is because your design and style seems different then most blogs and I'm looking for something
completely unique. P.S Sorry for getting off-topic but I had
to ask!
my page - alternate energy
Oddly, unlike most spam, the solar energy blog linked to seems good enough with genuine posts by different people (though I know sometimes genuine content is lifted and copied in to new sites etc).
Otherwise, the reason for allowing this through here, is in the rather amusing question about blog platform since it's so obviously Blogspot (freedomlightbulb.blogspot.com), and for that matter Greenwashing Lamps in the post is so obviously Wordpress (greenwashinglamps.wordpress.com) ;-)
I never knew that the different lamp types could be broken down into families like this. I found it interesting that incandescent lamps and luminescent lamps are the two main families and that everything else fits under them. I do agree that the incandescent light has a lot more soul and warmth. I prefer them in my home.
http://www.paclamp.com
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