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Torrance, CA, United States
Since 1983 LEDtronics has been the leader in designing and manufacturing environmentally friendly low power (energy saving) usage, long life LED bulbs and LED lamps as direct replace to incandescent bulbs. We satisfy our customers by delivering LED lighting solutions and products of consistently high quality within the agreed price and schedule. We also strive to exceed our customer’s expectations in terms of responsiveness with new designs to meet their future lighting requirements. One of LEDtronics distinguishing characteristics is the depth of our focus on the customer's mission in the broadest context. We not only respond to current requirements, but we also anticipate their emerging needs. LEDtronics Mission Statement: To Replace Energy-Wasting Lighting With World-Class Environmentally Responsible LED Bulbs and Products. The LEDtronics website is packed with direct-incandescent-replacement bright LED (Light Emitting Diode) lamps and LED bulbs. Our LED lamp and LED Bulb product offerings are available in a wide range of bulb sizes for multiple lighting applications.
Showing posts with label Area Lights. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Area Lights. Show all posts
Tuesday, November 1, 2011

LED T4 Tube Bulb Replaces 15-Watt Filament Bulbs with up to 94% Energy Savings, 50 Times Longer Life


LEDtronics® announces another of its energy-saving LED light bulbs: the LED15T4 -SIW-120A T4 tube bulb with an E12 candelabra base and 120A input voltage. The 0.9-Watt consuming LED tube bulb replaces incandescent bulb numbers 15T4, 15T6/CB/130, 15T7/CB/130 and GE 15T7C 13494 up to 15 Watts.

The LED15T4 series boasts more than 23 lumens and a spherical candela of 1.84 while drawing just 0.18mA current. This translates into an efficacy of 23.1 lumens per a watt of energy. It provides a warm-white light in the range 2800K to 3200K and is ideally used in indicator lamps, theater aisle seats, night lights, step lights and decorative lighting. It easily installs in any fixture with an E12 candelabra base.

With the 50,000-hour lifespan of white LEDs, the LEDtronics LED15T4 series lamp offers 50 times the average 1,000-hour rated life of an equivalent filament T4 bulb. With the 94% energy reduction compared to a 15-Watt incandescent bulb, savings from greatly extended life, reduced maintenance costs and major reduction in energy usage quickly return the capital investment expenditure, making the LED bulb as friendly to the environment as it is to the operating budget.

A clear, shatter-resistant polypropylene lens and a Rynite® sleeve protect the LEDs from environmental stress, while the solid-state design renders them impervious to electrical and mechanical shock, vibration, frequent switching and environmental extremes. LED lamps produce almost no heat and do not get hot to the touch. The LED15T4 -SIW-120A T4 tube bulb operates in an ambient operating temperature range of ~-22°F to ~+122°F.

The LEDtronics LED15T4 series bulbs comes with a 3-year limited warranty and is priced $18.53 each; availability is stock to 4-6 weeks for special requirements. Large-quantity discounts are available.

For technical information or for custom design and/or manufacturing needs, contact Jordon Papanier at 310-534-1505 or e-mail us at info@ledtronics.com, or postal mail at LEDtronics, Inc., 23105 Kashiwa Court, Torrance, CA 90505. Visit our website at www.LEDtronics.com

About LEDtronics®
Based in Torrance, California, LEDtronics, Inc., since 1983 has been a world leader in designing, manufacturing and packaging Solid State Lighting products and state-of-the-art LEDs to meet the world’s constantly changing lighting needs—from industrial control panel LED indicator lights to solid-state LED street lights, from direct incandescent- replacement based LED bulbs to direct fluorescent-replacement T8 LED tube lamps.

To browse the on-line product information for the LED15T4 tube bulb:
http://www.ledtronics.com/Products/ProductsDetails.aspx?WP=786

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

New White Body LED PAR30 Bulb


New White Body LED PAR30 Bulbs

Features:
Three Year Lamp Warranty
  • Easy Installation: Using Existing 26mm Medium Base Sockets in Dry, Indoor Settings
  • Long Operating Life: White LED Up to 50,000+ hrs
  • Solid Construction: UV Stabilized Plastic Lens, Aluminum body
  • Input Voltage: 90 to 290VAC
  • Replaces Up to 75W Halogen Bulbs
  • Even Lighting: High Intensity / No Halation
  • Ambient Operating Temperature Range: ~-4°F to ~+104°F [~-20°C to ~+40°C]
  • Ambient Humidity: 90%
  • High CRI
  • White Body Color
  • Dimensions: Dia: 3.74 (95.0mm) / L: 3.58” (91.0mm)
  • Weight: 0.625 lbs (0.283kg)
Product Web Link; http://www.ledtronics.com/Products/ProductsDetails.aspx?WP=86#87
Wednesday, September 14, 2011

Torrance firm shines light on LEDs (The Daily Breeze)


by Austin Siegemund-Broka Staff Writer

Lights fill the LEDtronics conference room – rows of unique ceiling lights, boxy warehouse lights, hanging chandeliers, stylish streetlights lined up against one wall.

Light–emitting diodes, called LEDs, power every one of them.

The sight dazzles, but it also represents how Torrance–based LEDtronics works with LEDs.

“We keep building custom products. That’s what we are doing; we do that constantly,” said Pervaiz Lodhie, LEDtronics president and CEO, glancing around the room with the look of a proud father.

Every LEDtronics light houses environmentally friendly LED chips, bits of solid chemicals that glow when electrons move across them.

But LEDtronics specializes in “packaging” the LEDs, Lodhie says – they build LED chips into lighting fixtures of hundreds of different shapes, sizes, and colors, designed to fit the diverse applications of LEDs today.

Customers, including IBM, Toyota, Boeing and the city of Torrance, come to LEDtronics for light fixtures as well as custom–designed lighting systems.

The company estimates they’ve designed over 10,000 LED fixtures, and Lodhie says LEDtronics develops one new product or redesign every day.

“We are constantly being challenged by the industry to give them the precise color, the precise this or that,” he said.

LEDs today consume 90 percent less energy than traditional incandescent bulbs and last about 100 times longer, though they often cost much Advertisement more.

LEDs also give off no energy as heat, their colors are easily adjustable and they are durable, able to withstand physical shocks and vibrations.

The market for the resilient light source took off in the late 1990s, more than tripling in size from 1995 to 2003, according to market research firm Strategies Unlimited.

Strategies reports that the industry grew from $3.8 billion in 2003 to $5.6 billion in 2009, driven by a boom in LED backlighting for cell phones and TVs; the market then doubled in 2009, reaching $10.8 billion in 2010.

Rarely does the market’s demand for a new technology rise that quickly, says Vrinda Bhandarkar, a senior analyst at Strategies Unlimited.

“There’s a lot of excitement and ‘cool’ associated with LEDs,” she said.

But the LED market’s recent boom doesn’t tell the whole story, Lodhie says.

“What people are finding as a `new LED market’ has been there for decades. It was behind the scenes, and nobody really knew,” he said.

Lodhie and his wife started LEDtronics in their Torrance garage in 1983.

Lodhie remembered early LEDs, developed in the 1970s, that only came in a couple colors and gave off little more than a dim glow.

But despite those limitations, he knew, the LEDs’ durability made them perfect for applications where they would weather vibration and couldn’t easily be changed.

LEDtronics initially produced LEDs as small indicator lights for a handful of niches – manufacturing machinery, elevators, military aircraft.

LEDtronics supplies the same kinds of lights to those markets today.

“These were the natural places that drove the industry continuously,” Lodhie said.

But LEDs increased in brightness roughly tenfold every decade, and 1995 brought the first white LED.

LEDtronics packaged each new LED chip into bulbs for an increasing array of customers and applications, Lodhie says.

Today, they still produce lights and indicators for industries such as healthcare, aerospace, defense and electronics.

But Lodhie says some customers now use LEDtronics’ lights in outdoor lighting, for parking lots and car dealerships, and in interior lighting design for museums and other architectural projects.

The company has also developed streetlights in Torrance and Pasadena, and bridge lighting for such structures as the Golden Gate Bridge – part of a movement by cities, including Los Angeles, Seattle and Boston, toward using LEDs in municipal lighting.

And they’ve even designed LEDs for entertainment lighting projects, such as decorations on sets for the Tony–winning musical “Wicked.”

“The revolution has been taking place, but people didn’t see it,” Lodhie said. “It’s a really exciting time for me, (with) what I have done in creating this market.”

But Lodhie also does not see LEDtronics’ success – or the current LED industry boom – as the end of the revolution.

“It has just begun. It’s a drop in the bucket; a lot more has to happen,” he said.

LEDs will provide light in more and more lighting applications, Lodhie believes.

Market analysts, including Bhandarkar at Strategies Unlimited and Jamie Fox, LED research manager at competing firm IMS, say the same.

“LEDs are the future of light. Most lighting applications will go to LED lighting,” Fox said. “Most people agree on that; it’s just question of when.”

Lodhie says LEDtronics, and the LED industry, do still face several obstacles to widespread LED use.

Many governments, including in the United States, have passed laws to phase out some types of incandescent bulbs to reduce energy use. That is good news for the LED industry.

Some LEDs’ high purchase prices can scare consumers, Lodhie says, though LEDs usually cut energy expenses enough to make them a strong long–term investment.

For consumers considering in–home LED lighting, for instance – a growing market, but one in which LEDtronics participates only minimally – LED light bulbs can cost daunting prices of $20 to $30.

But increasing LED usage and better technology will drive production costs and prices down, Lodhie says.

“It’s just a continuation of making it more affordable for more and more people, and that is happening,” he said.

He plans to enter the residential LED market more fully when that happens, and when the company’s brand has a stronger public presence.

But more crucially, he says, many lighting consumers just aren’t aware of the possibilities and benefits of LED light.

As consumers increasingly accept the energy–sipping bulbs, Lodhie believes, LED use will simply keep increasing.

“There’s no limit to applications,” he said. “There’s no end to it.”

Thursday, September 8, 2011

New R16 LED Lamps Deliver Energy-Efficiency and Long Life


LEDtronics® announces its latest generation of direct incandescent-replacement R16 LED Reflector Lamps with standard 26mm medium screw base. The bulbs operate on 120VAC and provide a concentrated 40-degree beam of light from a cluster of 40 LEDs.

The energy-efficient R16-40-SIW-120AM (3,000K warm white) and R16-40-TPW-120AM (5000K natural white) draw just 1.7 watts each and provide up to 140 lumens. Up to 90% savings in energy costs over incandescent and halogen bulbs, and an operating lifespan of up to 50,000-hour LED make these high-efficacy R16 lamps ideal for architects, retail store display creators, entertainment designers and other lighting professionals to integrate economical illumination into maintenance-intensive applications—display spot lights, showcase lights, area lights, signage and backlighting, in addition to reading and task lights. They also can be used as individual pixels in a large dot matrix screen and moving signs.

A clear, shatter-resistant lexan lens and a white polycarbonate sleeve protect the LED cluster from environmental stresses, making the lamps suitable for both indoor and outdoor use. Solid-state design renders LEDs impervious to electrical and mechanical shock, vibration, frequent switching and environmental extremes. Additionally, with the use of multiple LEDs, an LED cluster lamp continues to provide light even if one or more emitters fail, unlike what befalls an incandescent bulb when its filament breaks.

The virtually maintenance-free LEDtronics R16 lamps are also environmentally friendly—they contain neither lead nor mercury. As well, they reduce light pollution in outdoor installations and, as a result, are compatible with the international “Dark Skies” initiative.

Because of their low power draw, they are ideal for use with alternate or renewable energy resources like solar and wind power.

The R16-40-SIW-120AM and R16-40-TPW-120AM bulbs come with a 3-year limited warranty and are priced $49.50 each; availability is stock to 4-6 weeks for special requirements. Large-quantity discounts are available.

For technical information or for custom design and/or manufacturing needs, contact Jordon Papanier at 310-534-1505 or e-mail us at info@ledtronics.com, or postal mail at LEDtronics, Inc., 23105 Kashiwa Court, Torrance, CA 90505. Visit our website at www.LEDtronics.com

About LEDtronics®
Based in Torrance, California, LEDtronics, Inc., since 1983 has been a world leader in designing, manufacturing and packaging Solid State Lighting products and state-of-the-art LEDs to meet the world’s constantly changing lighting needs—from industrial control panel LED indicator lights to solid-state LED street lights, from direct incandescent- replacement based LED bulbs to direct fluorescent-replacement T8 LED tube lamps.

To browse the on-line product information for these R16 lamps:
http://www.ledtronics.com/Products/ProductsDetails.aspx?WP=487