Alan Ambrose Posted 22 hours ago Posted 22 hours ago (edited) Apart from @Thorfun, I can't see any mentions of CCT LED strips on 't 'ub - i.e. the ones that you can change the colour temperature of from warm to cool white. Any thoughts or experience? Edited 22 hours ago by Alan Ambrose
Russell griffiths Posted 21 hours ago Posted 21 hours ago What do you want to know, I’ve got about 12m of it in a kitchen fitted in a small aluminium track. all works from an app on the I pad and switched from the wall so the last setting is remembered. the LGBGT multi colour ones are ridiculously expensive compared to them. 1
Alan Ambrose Posted 20 hours ago Author Posted 20 hours ago @Russell griffiths - do you actually change the colour much and/or do you have it on a schedule?
Russell griffiths Posted 18 hours ago Posted 18 hours ago 2 hours ago, Alan Ambrose said: @Russell griffiths - do you actually change the colour much and/or do you have it on a schedule? The white ones we don’t alter much, chilled out mellow white in all the glass cabinets and on the ornaments. the RGB ones we have we mess with loads more, but that’s probably just the novelty, we haven’t moved in yet.
-rick- Posted 17 hours ago Posted 17 hours ago (edited) My aim for any new install is to have cct lights. I want them for three main reasons: 1. As dawn simulation to help me wake up even in the middle of winter with dark mornings. Using home automation to gradually introduce light over a period of time before the alarm goes off. Used to have a wake up light that does similar but expect an installed version with bright LEDs to be better. 2. As daylight augmentation during winter. I hate the dark days when cloud comes out and it’s dark enough inside to need to turn the light on but when you do the lights have such a different tone that I feel it better to close the curtains even hours before dusk. Again with automation and light sensors I believe it should be possible to have the lights turn on ct matched to the daylight and boost the light without feeling the jarring effect. 3. As dusk simulation. As per (1) but the other way round with ct moving from cool to warm as the evening goes on and help the body naturally prepare for sleep. In this case it’s moving dusk later during the dark months. * I’m not really bothered by multicoloured lights though do like the idea of having red low level lights come on dimly if I wake up and move around in the middle of the night. Suspect not worth the hassle and will just use very dim white for this. Edited 17 hours ago by -rick- Add bit on Red light and fix spelling 1
Mike Posted 15 hours ago Posted 15 hours ago (edited) 1 hour ago, -rick- said: 1. As dawn simulation to help me wake up even in the middle of winter with dark mornings. Using home automation to gradually introduce light over a period of time before the alarm goes off. Used to have a wake up light that does similar but expect an installed version with bright LEDs to be better. I'd be with you for at least the fade-up feature, given a suitable controller to automate it. 1 hour ago, -rick- said: 2. As daylight augmentation during winter. I hate the dark days when cloud comes out and it’s dark enough inside to need to turn the light on but when you do the lights have such a different tone that I feel it better to close the curtains even hours before dusk. I hate dark days too, so if the alternative was a fixed CCT of 3,000 K or less, then this would be useful. However, with my personal preference for 4,000K I never have a desire to close the curtains before dusk. 1 hour ago, -rick- said: 3. As dusk simulation. As per (1) but the other way round with ct moving from cool to warm as the evening goes on and help the body naturally prepare for sleep. In this case it’s moving dusk later during the dark months. I can see the utility of this for some people. Though, as a night-owl, it wouldn't suit me at all, at least not until the last few minutes of the day. 6 hours ago, Alan Ambrose said: Any thoughts or experience? In short, I think that the value of changeable CCT lighting depends on how you like your lighting; I'm not a fan of cool lighting (except in limited circumstances) nor of warm lighting (unless it's in an old cottage or the result of real candles), but if you are, then go for it - in which case I'd recommend applying it to all lighting (that will be switched on together) so that you don't end up with an odd mix of colour temperatures. Edited 15 hours ago by Mike 1
-rick- Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago 10 hours ago, Mike said: I hate dark days too, so if the alternative was a fixed CCT of 3,000 K or less, then this would be useful. However, with my personal preference for 4,000K I never have a desire to close the curtains before dusk. If 4000k works from dawn to dusk for you then yes that’s a cheaper alternative. 10 hours ago, Mike said: I can see the utility of this for some people. Though, as a night-owl, it wouldn't suit me at all, at least not until the last few minutes of the day. I’m mostly a night owl too, but I think there is value in having a way to subtly wind down near bedtime and the older I get the more I realise how lighting impacts that. 10 hours ago, Mike said: in which case I'd recommend applying it to all lighting (that will be switched on together) so that you don't end up with an odd mix of colour temperatures. absolutely. Mismatched temperature lighting is awful. Bulbs is the difficult aspect. LED strips are cheap and easy to do as CCT but I’ve still not settled on the best way to do temp changing bulbs as I’d rather not have smart bulbs but smart controllers, dumb bulbs. After the last conversation we had on this topic here I’ve started considering buying non cct bulbs and gutting them to replace the LEDs with CCT ones and controlling them with a custom controller as mad as that sounds because I’ve not seen products that do what I want.
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