mdshunk
Senior Member
- Location
- Right here.
I must put up 100 paddle fans a year, and I've noticed something notable in maybe the last 6 months. It seems that most of the paddle fans with incandescent light kits have candelabra based lampholders now. This has been a bit of a pain, and a potential blessing.
I say pain, because people often forget to buy lamps, and I don't carry but one or two candelabra based lamps on the truck. Pain again, because people are used to buying medium based lamps, if they do remember to buy them for their new paddle fan. Blessing, because people very often over-lamp paddle fans. They are almost always limited (by the UL max lamp sticker) to 60 watts per lampholder. Burned up paddle fan lampholders due to over-lamping are a somewhat steady source of service work.
When I first saw these paddle fans starting to come through with candelabra based lampholders, my first thought was that it was to enhance safety. I figured that the UL or a manufacturer's association learned that paddle fan light sockets are typically over-lamped, and they're burning up. About the biggest candelabra based lamp you can buy is 60 watts, so they are automatically limited by this fact. No over-lamping possible now. Nice.
I had to go to my lighting supplier today to get replacement light kits for 2 old paddle fans today. Since I didn't know the brand of the old fans, but I knew (visually) what would work, they just let me root through their bins of light kits. I noticed something else interesting. In one bin of light kits, there was the same light kit in both medium base and in candelabra base. Both kits had the exact same part number. It seems that the medium based paddle fan light kits are being completely phased out.
I questioned the lighting guy about what I found, and his comment was, "Yeah, something about energy efficiency". Energy efficiency? This made me wonder, since I thought it was about safety all these months now. After all, a 60 watt medium based lamp is just as efficient as a 60 watt candelabra based lamp.
I got on the Energy Star site, and sure enough, this is a new change. If the paddle fan doesn't have fluorescent lampholders, it must be equipped with some means to limit the max wattage of the fan's light kit to 190 watts total.
Read all about it:
http://www.eere.energy.gov/buildings/appliance_standards/residential/ceiling_fans.html
(moral of the story, stock your truck with more 60 watt candelabra based lamps)
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I say pain, because people often forget to buy lamps, and I don't carry but one or two candelabra based lamps on the truck. Pain again, because people are used to buying medium based lamps, if they do remember to buy them for their new paddle fan. Blessing, because people very often over-lamp paddle fans. They are almost always limited (by the UL max lamp sticker) to 60 watts per lampholder. Burned up paddle fan lampholders due to over-lamping are a somewhat steady source of service work.
When I first saw these paddle fans starting to come through with candelabra based lampholders, my first thought was that it was to enhance safety. I figured that the UL or a manufacturer's association learned that paddle fan light sockets are typically over-lamped, and they're burning up. About the biggest candelabra based lamp you can buy is 60 watts, so they are automatically limited by this fact. No over-lamping possible now. Nice.
I had to go to my lighting supplier today to get replacement light kits for 2 old paddle fans today. Since I didn't know the brand of the old fans, but I knew (visually) what would work, they just let me root through their bins of light kits. I noticed something else interesting. In one bin of light kits, there was the same light kit in both medium base and in candelabra base. Both kits had the exact same part number. It seems that the medium based paddle fan light kits are being completely phased out.
I questioned the lighting guy about what I found, and his comment was, "Yeah, something about energy efficiency". Energy efficiency? This made me wonder, since I thought it was about safety all these months now. After all, a 60 watt medium based lamp is just as efficient as a 60 watt candelabra based lamp.
I got on the Energy Star site, and sure enough, this is a new change. If the paddle fan doesn't have fluorescent lampholders, it must be equipped with some means to limit the max wattage of the fan's light kit to 190 watts total.
Read all about it:
http://www.eere.energy.gov/buildings/appliance_standards/residential/ceiling_fans.html
(moral of the story, stock your truck with more 60 watt candelabra based lamps)
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