Jul 03

Announcing our new 3rd Generation LED Light Bulbs

Announcing our new 3rd Generation LED Light Bulbs

We are extremely excited to announce our newest 3rd Generation LED Light bulbs! After weeks of testing we’ve found the brightest LED bulbs on the planet.

How do we know these are the brightest? We got a bunch of samples from manufacturers from all around the world and put them through weeks of testing. The following are the winners that are not only the brightest but have the best bang for the buck.

2nd generation LED bulbs use a big hunk of metal to cool them. This isn’t necessarily bad, it’s just that it makes them expensive - and price is one of the biggest factors in getting people to adopt LED lighting. Our new bulbs are different as follows:

Quanta-18 and Quanta-9 - Uses shatterproof plastic and air-cooling technology to make them feather light and cool to the touch as well as cost MUCH less than comparable 2nd generation LED light bulbs from other manufacturers.

Chromia-6 - No more all metal heatsink - just metal fins that provide much more surface area for cooling similar to those used in the newest computer processors (CPU’s)

Hydralux-4 - This is the first LED bulb in the world to use LIQUID COOLING technology, so half the bulb isn’t covered with the metal heatsink anymore unlike other LED globes, and you get light ALL AROUND, instead of just off the top half.

Check out Eternaleds.com for more detailed descriptions, and as always real-life side by side application photos so you can see how these bulbs compare to their incandescent equivalents!

5 Responses to “3rd Generation LED Bulbs - Shatter-Proof Plastic and Liquid Goodness”

  1. Megan Says:

    We offer some LED Bulbs as well, a bit different then the type you offer. We specialize in Candelabra bulbs and are looking to expand the line. Check us out at:

    http://www.uslightingproducts.com/catalog/LED_Bulbs-127.html

  2. James Says:

    Won’t these liquid bulbs break if dropped, what is the liquid made out of?

  3. webmaster Says:

    James: The liquid is similar in composition to paraffin oil. It’s completely non-toxic - we HAVE broken one before, and it’s simply a matter of wiping it up with a wet towel and carefully disposing of the glass..

  4. Bob Sullivan Says:

    I’m still unclear as to why LED’s produce heat in the first place. Heat indicates energy loss but LED’s are supposed to be the most energy efficient. Do CFL’s produce similar heat?

  5. valerio Says:

    I think the right way is not to try to simulate the original bulbs using LED, perhaps this can be
    right only for the phase of “transition”.
    You can also design LED lamps, working from the beginning to use the light source LED, getting the best.
    We are working at this theme for a couple of years, take a look at:
    http://lampade-led.blogspot.com/

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