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Free said:
Good points. What is the Color Temperature of Halogen Flood lights? Personally my favorite lighting source.
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~2900K to 3100K, depending upon the lifetime. There is no doubt that this LED floodlight is meant to imitate a halogen flood, but my question is why? For reference, the sun is about 5500K at high noon at the equator, and is 4500K or above during most of the day. The only time sunlight approximates incandescent lighting in color temperature is during the first/last fifteen minutes when the sun is rising/setting, a period during which our eyes are not particularly suited to seeing well. This is why it makes no sense to me to imitate a light source (incandescent) which is not only unnatural in appearance but also poorly suited for our visual response. I remember going into great detail about this in another thread. I also have noticed that my eyes feel better since I no longer use either incandescents, fluorescents with magnetic ballasts, or low-CRI fluorescents. These are all poor light sources which should be avoided. Indeed, if full-spectrum fluorescents were produced in large quantity, their main drawback (higher price) wouldn't even exist. I hope LED doesn't follow the same route where you have low-cost mass-produced "warm-white" varieties with relatively poor CRI, and much higher cost 5000K "full-spectrum" types. While the better CRI phosphors do cost more, the amount of phosphor used on an LED as compared to a fluorescent tube is so small that any cost difference is almost negligible.
BTW, have you ever tried 5000K fluorescents with good color rendering (CRI > 90), and running on a flicker-free electronic ballast? This is about as close to natural sunlight as we can get today, and perhaps LEDs will do even better, or at least I can hope. Many people who say they prefer halogens over everything else haven't even tried any of the better alternatives. Even under halogens dark greens, for example, look like navy blue, and purples look almost black. The CRI of incandescents may be 100, but this only means you can distinguish two very close colors more easily than under a light source with a CRI of, say, 90. It says nothing about whether colors appear natural or not.
I might also add that I find it rather amusing that some of the same people who have complained (and rightly so) about pea-green tinted "white" Luxeons, or even blue-tinted ones, actually say they like "white" light with a yellow tint (which is really what "warm white" is). And even more interestingly, some of the same people who admire the pure white light of LED flashlights would rather have "yellow-white" lighting in their living spaces. I personally find it difficult to understand these apparent contradictions, especially in light of (no pun intended) surveys showing that if no drawbacks exist (i.e. poor color rendering, flicker) a majority of people prefer higher color temperature artificial lighting closer to sunlight, and nearly everybody (except vampires /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/grin.gif) prefers sunlight over every other type of light.