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Hi,

What do people consider is an acceptable failure level for LED bulbs?

I have two examples, both from TLC "LEDLite" home brand lights.

1st, I fitted 6 of their 8W filament LED bulbs with 2 years guarantee in my parents house, and 3 have failed within the first year. (50% failure in half the guarantee period)

2nd I fitted 45 “LED Fire Rated Downlight” lamps (all in one fitting) with 5 year guarantee. Two years in and there are already 6 lamps that have failed, so that is over 10% failure in less than half the guarantee.

I would like to tell TLC that a 50% failure rate is unacceptable and get a full refund on all 6 lamps since they are not fit for purpose, but what about the 10% failure on the 45 lamps?
 
A few mechanical failures but not electrical, why do you ask?

I had quite a few traumatic instances of damaging the plasterboard (or its finish) while replacing downlighters, which is part of the reason why I prefer front-load GU10 fittings which contain no electronics and technically should last almost forever (only the bulb would fail). Thus simply curious what might still happen to these fittings!
 
Any GU10 can with a 50W lamp, that had been installed for a while would have seriously cooked the plasterboard around it, making it difficult to remove without ceiling damage. Best way was to pull one side of the fitting down a few mm, then flip the fixing spring off of one of its pegs, then pull down the other side and repeat. Risked never seeing the springs again, but that's preferable to a ragged hole.
 
The lamps I kept on the shelf and used with fittings I installed were dichroic, but I never really took much notice when fault finding in customers' houses.

I see - dichroic lamps might indeed overheat anything located above, especially if enclosed by the fire can! Also eard from a few sparks complaining about their clients' ceiling voids (or something else) ruined by dichroic halogen reflectors. But we're in the era of LEDs now anyway...
 
Any GU10 can with a 50W lamp, that had been installed for a while would have seriously cooked the plasterboard around it, making it difficult to remove without ceiling damage. Best way was to pull one side of the fitting down a few mm, then flip the fixing spring off of one of its pegs, then pull down the other side and repeat. Risked never seeing the springs again, but that's preferable to a ragged hole.

Thanks - this has been really useful :)

Not a fan of halogen lamps anymore - not to mention the power consumption or cooking up the plasterboard, mains halogen lamps could arc and explode badly in the wrong circumstances...
 

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