Jump to content

Get rid of those awful downlighters...


Ferdinand

2148 views

Bored of your downlighters? Why not replace them with bulbs to give a different appearance to your ceiling?

 

Just an idea that I happened to see in a house in Kent a couple of weeks ago.

 

GU10 bulbs are available in shape other than downlighters, for example  candle bulbs: 

 

IMG_0660-small.jpg.33c6c0ca315b86f13ffa6b5a1d7804ea.jpg

 

IMG_0661-small.jpg.7e7f7e230f49fefeb706ed4914c99bee.jpg

 

 

It is far netter not to have done it in the first place, but at least there are ways to mitigate the damage.

 

(No, GU10 downlighers are not my favourite. form of lighting.)

13 Comments


Recommended Comments

After struggling with kitchen lighting and spending a fortune replacing bulbs very very regularly, I vowed to go back to a simple fluorescent tube in my next kitchen.  It’s what we have in this temporary house and it lights the kitchen perfectly.  It’s not pretty, but it is definitely functional.

I prefer table lamps in living room areas but I like them controlled by light switches.  A bit more effort at design stage but the plugs are cheap and readily available.

Link to comment

It seems to me that flat panels are the “natural” form factor for LEDs as they can emit both their light and heat in all directions easily. Also, they avoid big holes in the ceiling. They seem to still be a bit of a niche product, I'm not sure why.

  • Like 2
Link to comment

We have flat panel LEDs in the kitchen/dining room and in the hall.  They seem to have a very even spread of light, with none of the glare often associated with downlights.  We originally fitted MR16 downlights in the kitchen/dining room, with 12V LED lamps, and still have a fair few of these around the house, in the bathrooms, WC utility room and my study. 

 

Replacing the downlights with panel lights was pretty easy, and didn't require any redecoration.  I'll probably replace more of the downlights with panels at some future point, just to get better light quality.

Link to comment

That sounds like a good solution.  We’re going to the NEC show in a couple of weeks so will look out for them 

Link to comment

I’ve just replaced some downlighting with the LAP fixed ones from Screwfix and pleasantly surprised. Like @JSHarris though I’ve used the flat panel ones and very happy with them and the light you get - if they were to do them so you could have multiple units from a single transformer then I would be even happier ..!

Link to comment
13 minutes ago, PeterW said:

I’ve just replaced some downlighting with the LAP fixed ones from Screwfix and pleasantly surprised. Like @JSHarris though I’ve used the flat panel ones and very happy with them and the light you get - if they were to do them so you could have multiple units from a single transformer then I would be even happier ..!

 

 

Easy to sort out, as I run ours of a single power supply.  I did this for two reasons, the first was that I'd already got 12V running to the downlighter positions, the second was that I found there was a fair bit of radio interference from the small constant current power supply units; enough to make a portable radio unusable, but then we do live in an area where radio reception is pretty poor to start with.

 

I ended up adding another 24 V power supply anyway, as we decided to increase the size of some of the units and they needed a higher voltage.  The mod I did sounds crude and inefficient, but when I worked out the additional losses I found they were small enough to live with, in return for the simplicity of the approach.  I made up connecting leads for each panel light that had a 2.1mm free socket on the end (so that the lights would plug straight in to the new wiring loom), and added a 68 Ohm, 1 Watt resistor, in series with the positive supply to each lamp.

 

These resistors limited the current to each lamp to the rated 300mA, and only introduced a small efficiency loss, barely any greater than than of the rather crude constant current driver units that they are supplied with.  By a happy coincidence, the same resistor value works for the 3 W, 0.3 A lamps and the 6 W 0.3 A lamps, although the latter need a 24 VDC supply and the former a 12 VDC supply.

Link to comment
13 minutes ago, Russell griffiths said:

Ok cool, I was envisaging a more office type thing, 600 x600 fitted into a false ceiling affair. 

 

 

There are plenty of those about too, but the smaller round panels are pretty similar to flush-faced downlighters, but without the projection behind.  The 3 W ones are pretty much the same, in terms of light output, as a downlighter fitted with an LED, but with a wider and more even light distribution.  The ones we have fitted into a 65mm diameter hole, so were a straight replacement for the downlights we used to have in the kitchen and dining room.  I opted to replace four of them (two over the island, two over the sink) with the larger 6 W panels, which meant opening the holes out a bit, but this wasn't that hard, and the mix of 3 W and 6 W units in the same ceiling seems to work well.

 

We have cool white ones in the kitchen area and warm white ones in the dining area, and TBH I prefer the look of the warm white ones, and may change the cool white ones over one day, as the warm white ones seem just as bright.

Link to comment

I have temporary bulbs in our kitchen but fancy using led flat panels like @JSHarris, my only worry is the radio interference some have.

Link to comment

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...