LED Lights

LED Lights
LED Lights

Thursday, January 27, 2011

LED Tubes

Description

LED Tubes are designed to replace traditional fluorescent tubes, i.e., T8 tubes and T10 tubes. 8W LEDs to replace 20W fluorescents, 18W LEDs to replace 40W fluorescents, 24W to replace 60W fluorescents, 50-60% energy saving. Standard length from 2ft to 8ft (600mm to 2400mm).

Sielement is honored to introduce to you its innovative and exclusive LED tubes. We focus on product performance, and at the same time we also attach importance to funtionality. Thus, three typical solutions will be provided: Basic Solution, Dimmable Solution, and Induction Solution.
  • Basic Solution: tubes with internal Power Supply Unit (PSU) which can be running on existing fixtures directly.
  • Dimmable Solution: tubes with external PSU and remote control dimming system (with standard lighting troffers).
  • Induction Solution: tubes with external PSU, remote control dimming system as well as intelegent induction system.
For more detailed information about our dedicated LED tube solutions, please request our PDF catalogues or contact us directly.
LED Tubes
LED Tubes Warehouse
LED Tubes
LED T8 Tubes

Features

  • No flickering
  • No RF interference
  • No UV radiation
  • No mercury
  • Wide beam angle: >= 240 degree
  • Instant soft start
  • Dimmable and non-dimmable
  • Good heat dissipation
  • Long lifespan, >= 30000H
  • CE & RoHS compliant
  • UL for PSUs

Application

  • Indoor lighting
  • Residential lighting, Home lighting
  • Commercial lighting, Hotel, Shops etc.
  • Public lighting, Hospitals, Parking lots etc.

Technical Parameters

LED Tubes - 2ft/4ft (600mm/1200mm)

LED Tubes
LED Tubes Technical Parameters

Dimmable Solution and Induction Dimmable Solution

Dimmable LED Tubes
Dimmable LED Tubes
Induction LED Tubes
Induction Dimmable LED Tubes

For more detailed product information, please request for PDF catalogue.
Or, should you have any OEM/ODM projects, please contact us to discuss.

LED Light Bulbs

Description

LED light bulbs are designed to replace traditional incandescent bulbs. 3W LEDs to replace 25 incandescent, 5/6W LEDs to replace 40W incandescent, 7W LEDs to replace 50W incandescent, 9W LEDs to replace 60W incandescent, 80-90% energy saving.
LED Light Bulbs

Features

  • No flickering
  • No RF interference
  • No UV radiation
  • No mercury
  • Instant soft start
  • Dimmable and non-dimmable
  • Good heat dissipation
  • Long lifespan, >= 30000H
  • CE & RoHS compliant

Application

Technical Parameters




LED Light Bulbs
LED Light Bulbs Technical Parameters

For more detailed product information, please request for PDF catalogue.
Or, should you have any OEM/ODM projects, please contact us to discuss.

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

LED makers in China plan to add numerous MOCVD systems in 2011

Mitsui and Unity Opto are to invest in Forepi, LED makers in China plan to add numerous MOCVD systems in 2011, Epistar is making a further investment in its China-based JV, and Tyntek is also expanding.

Mitsui and Unity Opto to invest in Forepi

Mitsui & Co., Ltd., a major Japan-based industrial conglomerate, is to become the largest shareholder in Taiwan-based LED wafer and chip maker Formosa Epitaxy Inc (Forepi). Mitsui will invest around NT$2.7 billion (approximately JPY7.6 billion) to acquire 15% of Forepi as part of an upcoming private placement of 90 million shares at a price of NT$36.44 per share.

Founded in 1999, Forepi is the second-largest LED epitaxy and chip manufacturer in Taiwan and has plants in Taoyuan, Taiwan and Yangshou, Jingu province, China. Mitsui says the deal is part of its aim to “create new value by consolidating the resources along the LED supply chain.” As well as having a network of shops selling LCD TVs and monitors, Mitsui has held a 16% stake in AOC International, one of the world’s leading monitor makers.

A Taiwan Economic News article says that, in addition to the Mitsui deal, Unity Opto Corp. will purchase 15.3 million shares in Forepi for an investment of US$18.6 million. Unity is a leading LED packager in Taiwan, and the deal will help to secure a steady source of LED chips for its backlight packages used in various applications, including TVs, computer monitors and tablet PCs. Also, the company has begun introducing LED packages for general lighting.

China LED makers to add MOCVD systems in 2011

China's LED industry is expected to install 700-800 MOCVD systems in 2011 compared with 330 units installed in 2010, according to a report on www.digitimes.com. This trend is likely to enable China's LED industry to catch up with Taiwan in terms of MOCVD production capacity.

The report also suggested that one China-based LED maker has given an order for somewhere between 400 and 500 MOCVD machines to Germany-based Aixtron. If this is true (Aixtron didn’t comment but its share price rose rapidly after the report came out) then delivery lead times will be greatly extended.

The report says that Sanan Optoelectronics is currently the largest LED-chip maker in China. The company apparently had a total of 40 MOCVD machines at the end of 2010 and will expand this to 100 units in 2011. The current second- and third-largest chip makers, Xiamen Changelight and Inspur Huaguang Optoelectronics, are expected to each have around 30 machines by the end of 2011.

Epistar invests further in China JV

Epistar Corp., Taiwan’s largest LED chipmaker, is to invest an additional US$19.5 million in United LED Shan Dong Corp, a joint venture established in mainland China with United Microelectronics Corp. This will push Epistar’s investment in the Chinese joint venture to a total of US$27.5 million, with its stakeholding increasing to 55 percent from 50 percent, according to an article in the Taipei Times.

The same article quoted an analyst company, which is forecasting that Epistar’s sales will grow by 25 percent to 30 percent year-on-year in 2011, after experiencing weakening demand and falling prices in the final quarter of 2010.

Tyntek expands in China and Taiwan

Taiwan-based LED maker Tyntek plans to invest CNY153 million (US$23 million) to set up an LED production joint venture with the Fuzhou government in China, according to an article on the Digitimes website. The first phase of development will focus on LED epitaxy and chip production, and around 30 MOCVD systems could be installed eventually. Production is scheduled to commence at the end of the third quarter at the earliest.

The article also says that Tyntek will install a further 10-15 MOCVD machines at its Taichung, Taiwan facility in the second and third quarters of 2011.

About the Author
Tim Whitaker is the Editor of LEDs Magazine.

LED lighting market expected to compete more intensify with its price dropping

The market estimated that LED lighting products' prices would drop by 15-20% each year amid increase competition in the market as vendors reduce prices to gain market share, which even be fall to one-third of current prices.

At first, the Japanese market appeared to price war in 2009. Sources from LED companies indicated that the price competition had extended to China, Europe and the US.

Some light bulb makers reportedly would introduce LED lighting products at end-use price of US$10 in 2011, which would compete for pricing scheduled to enter the LED sector with distributors and retailers well-known, and the price battle would only intensify in the future.

Toshiba LED Mini Bulb Exploded Diagram

We have exploded several types of LED lamps (E27, MR16, GU10, Par30) in a series of articles, illustrating some interesting renderings. Now in this post, we will demonstrate some real stuffs – an exploded Toshiba LED mini bulb.

LED Light bulbs
Toshiba LED Mini Bulbs

This is what a 3.4W Toshib LED mini bulb looks like before being exploed.
LED Light Bulbs
Toshiba LED Light Bulbs - Lamp Cover

This is the lamp cover of a Toshiba LED bulb. This is a translucent lamp cover, neither transparent nor frosted lamp cover. The LED in the lamp can be seen from outside the lamp through the translucent cover.

Module LEDs
Toshiba Mini LED Bulbs - Module LED

Toshiba LED Light Bulbs - Exploded 01

Now, the mini bulb has been exploded. We can see very clearly, a module LED (about 3W) is on the center of a PCB with aluminum plate (for heat dissipating). Judging from the LED’s colour, this is probably a warm white LED bulb. The PCB is quite simple, but we still find two electric wires are connected to something in the lamp body.
Toshiba LED Light Bulbs

LED Light Bulbs
Toshiba LED Light Bulbs - Exploded 02

From this photo, the body of the light bulb can be seen right through. And finally, the secret of the two wires has been revealed. The wires are connected to the driver. The driver is basically some electronic components integrated on a PCB. We have explained that in our previous articles that when LEDs work, they usually need some drivers as they can not be driven by AC current directly. However, in fact, this conclusion is only applied to DC LEDs. There is another type of LEDs which is AC-driven LEDs which can be driven by AC current.

Above is how we exploded a Toshiba LED mini bulb.

Monday, January 24, 2011

Apple Booked Epistar's LED Backlights for iPad

Reportedly, Taiwan LED maker Epistar has acquired Apple's order for LED backlights for use in iPad.

Benefiting from increasing LED applications in TV, notebook PCs and lightings, Epistar confirmed that its production lines have been fully booked by contract orders till this June. This secures the firm strong growth momentum in sales and shipments in the first half of 2011.


Source: LEDinside
Reposted: sielement.com

Vermont Goes Green with LED Streetlights

Vermont's largest municipal electric utility is going green with 35 LED streetlights retrofits in a residential area for the first time, and saving 74% of the energy used by traditional streetlights.

It's said the Burlington Electric Department already had been using LED streetlights in downtown commercial areas, but now will do so on Shore Road along Lake Champlain and neighboring streets.

This LED retrofit was estimated to save74% of the energy used by traditional streetlights and officials hoped to expand the installment in the future.


Source: LEDinside
Reposted: sielement.com

Sunday, January 23, 2011

Diagrams of Typical LED Par Lamps: Par30

Continuing with our last post "Diagrams of Typical LED Spotlights: GU10" regarding GU10 LED spotlights, in this post, we will talk about LED Par30 Lamps.

LED Par30 Lamps

LED Par30 Lamps

Traditional Par lamps are commonly used in stage ligting applications. Par lamps are used to illuminate the stages, with dynamic-changing light colour, they are common lighting fixtures on the stage. However, because of the high power consumption, Par lamps are now gradually being replaced by LED PAR lamps. LED Par Lamps are designed to replace traditional halogen Par lamps. 5W LED to replace 40W halogon, 7W LED to replace 50W halogen, 9W LED to replace 60W halogen, 12W to replace 75W halogen, 80-90% energy saving. See Fg. LED Par30 Lamps.

From the appearance point of view, LED Par lamps and traditional halogen Par lamps look very similar. However, in fact, the difference between them is tremendous.

Light Source: light source is the essential difference between LED Par lamps and halogen Par lamps, and that's the reason why LED lights are much more efficient than halogen lamps. halogen lamps generate light by heating tungsten that covered by halogen gas, while for LEDs, simply describing, when current goes through LEDs, compounded particles in P-N junctions will then release photons (energy). LEDs generate less heat when emitting light, that's the reason why LEDs are much more efficient than halogen lamps and incandescent bulbs.

LED Par30 Lamps

LED Par30 Lamps - Dimension

Materials: materials are different, LED Par lamps usually need aluminum heatsink for heat dissipation while halogen Par lamps do not - their lamp bodies are usually made of plastic.

Driver: furthermore, LED par lamps need drivers (or transformers) in order to be running in existing GU10 fittings, normally 110V or 240V high-voltage fittings.

The picture below illustrates a typical LED Par30 lamp's exploded view. The Par30 lamp is decomposed into 9 components as can be seen from the diagram. Following are the corresponding annotations.

LED Par30 Lamps

LED Par30 Lamps - Componencts

1. Cover
2. Lens: beam angle usually customizable
3. Holder
4. LEDs
5. MC PCB
6. Heatsink
7. Screw
8. Plug holder
9. Replacable plug: E26,E27

Copyrighted by: www.sielement.com

Image Source: ledcax.com

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Various standard LED lampholders: E27, MR16, GU10, PAR

According to installation, lampholders are generally divided into bayonet-type and screw, etc. According to material, bakelite, lamp holders are made of plastic, metal, ceramics, etc. For example, E27 maybe the most commonly used screw lampholder for light bulbs. And the lampholders for fluorescent and energy-saving tubes are referred to as T8 and T5.

Some lampholders may require up to IP68 protection grading. Usually lampholder are required to meet IEC (International Electrotechnical Commission standard) security certification.

Lampholder Classification:

Typically, the name of a lampholder type is likely to be like this “letter(s) + number(s)”. A letter at the beginning often indicates the shape of the bulb, i.e. E for Edison, T for tubular, R for reflector.

E12, E14, E26, E27, E40 and other names with “E” at the begining are all Edison screw lampholders. Obviously, E represents Edison, the name of the great man who invented incandescent bulb. E27 is commonly used in residential lighting – incandescent light bulbs. E14 has a smaller size than E27, while E40 is larger than E27.

B22, with 2-pin screw, is another commonly used lampholder type for incandescent light bulbs.

GU lamps (e.g., GU10) is a daily use bayonet-type. GU: G type lamp holder, said plug-in, U said that U-shaped lamp part of the show, behind the numbers that light foot hole center distance (in “mm”) .

MR16, MR11 lamps. Begining with “MR”, followed by a number, this type of lamps are usually used as spot lighting for a small area. The lamps usually have two small pins. MR: Multiface Reflect, multi-faceted reflector (light cup), followed by numbers indicates the lamp cup diameter(unit is 1/8 inch). E.g., MR16′s diameter = 16 × 1/8 = 2 inches or = 50mm. The same calculation for MR11.

PAR lamps are generally PAR20 PAR30 PAR36 PAR46 PAR56, volume may be long or short, also known as down light, light beam, used to illuminate the stage, dynamic change color, are common fixtures on the stage, because the relatively large power consumption, but also grilled Feeling, now gradually being replaced by LED PAR lamps.Dimension is increasing as the number following “PAR” increases, i.e., PAR38 has a larger size than that of PAR30′s.

LED Light Bulbs E27
E27

LED Spotlights MR16
MR16

LED Spotlights GU10
GU10

LED Par Lamps
PAR Lamps



Copyrighted by: sielement.com

Awesome, LED Light Shoes!

Remember we posted an article about LED Light Underwear a few weeks ago. Now, some other cool stuff are found. This time, let’s check the LED light shoes out!

LED Light Shoes
LED Light Shoes
LED Light Shoes

 LED Light Shoes


Doesn’t it look cool? I can not wait to buy one, lol…

Incredible, seems the designers can use LED to create things beyond imagination. LED clothes, LED shoes, and next time, maybe LED light hair?

Originally posted by: sielement.com