As LEDs gain a greater portion of the lighting market, they are
currently used in a variety of devices and applications ranging from
traffic control devices (e.g. traffic lights, which include the single
signal device that changes colors from green to yellow to red),
Battery Powered Outdoor String Lights,
hazard signs, message displays (e.g. Times Square, New York,
commodities and news message boards, scoreboards), cell phones,
televisions, large video screens used at sporting and other outdoor
events (e.g. Miami Dolphins end-zone screen), calculators, digital
clocks and watches, flashlights (including models for which 60 seconds
of manual winding provides one-hour of light, eliminating the need to
stockpile fresh batteries for emergencies), Christmas lights, airport
runway lights, buoy lights, and automotive applications (e.g. indicator
lights as well as head lights and signal lights in some vehicles;
driver’s of the new 2006 Ford Mustang can even change the color (125
different varieties) of their “LED-laden dashboard by using the ‘My
Color’ feature”.
In fact the automotive industry plans to replace all bulbs with
Metal Halide Flood Light
by 2010, while efforts are currently underway to replace all traffic
signals with LED devices. At the same time, plans are in place to
eventually use LEDs to light streets as well as much of the Third World
and other areas “with no means of electricity” since “solar charged
batteries” can power LEDs for the duration of each night. In addition,
“Phillips Electronics is developing remote-controlled LED room lighting
[while] Boeing Corp. plans to use LED’s throughout the interior of its
new 787 Dream liner commercial jet.”
With the promise that
Dimmable LED Track Lighting Fixtures
hold, it is likely that someday they will provide illumination for
houses and offices, X-Ray capabilities for the medical field, power
computer monitors, as well as an assortment of other devices and
applications. The possibilities are endless. However, before LEDs can
supplant the traditional bulb, “designers and advocates of the
technology must overcome… the usual obstacles to mainstream market
adoption: Industry-accepted standards must be developed and costs must
be reduced.”
Currently costs are coming down and some companies
are moving towards these industry standards (e.g. Phillips Electronics
is working on LED bulbs that can screw into existing light sockets,
while besthomeledlighting.com already offers LED screwball bulbs -- one
consisting of 70 LEDS that emits a "warm white color similar to the
light from an incandescent bulb" using only 3 Watts of energy and
another LED bulb that actually changes colors when lit). With these
efforts along with the adoption, exploitation, and production of LED
technology by growing numbers of companies, it is inevitable that LEDs
will become the sole source of lighting rendering traditional
incandescent and fluorescent bulbs extinct. In short, LEDs are the light
of the future, a light that will benefit not only consumers but also
industry and the Earth in general. You can visit
deedoptoelectronics.com for more details.
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