So this is a quick and raw video of one of our new products that can be found on the website. It’s basically an LED light bar and it’s called the Eternaleds Lumistick. It’s 4.5 watts of PURE POWER! But seriously, it’s actually pretty bright and small enough to put anywhere, like under a kitchen cabinet, or in a drawer. Which also means that I have a lot of ideas for some arts and crafts for it. Imagine taking two of these and attaching it to an AC battery back, adding a red tinted filter to it, then running around in a park. Can you say Instant Lightsaber? That is one of my ideas for a video in the next coming months. If you have any questions about it or if you’re interested in seeing any other Eternaleds bulbs in action, post in the comments. Enjoy!
This website is crazy with it's new LED products for eyes and a mouth.
We were reviewed by The LED Museum. Yay! This is the second Eternaleds bulb review (since that first one a few months ago) that we’ve gotten so it’s good to see our name out there. LED Museum is run by a really nice guy by the name of Craig Johnson since 1999 and he’s done reviews on a ton of different LED-types of products from LED light bulbs to flashlights to nightlights and kids toys. I checked his site and he’s got thousands of reviews of various things that twinkle. The nice thing is he’s got pictures of the beam of the lights on a wall so you can see how the spread looks and how bright it is.
He’s got a bunch of tech specs of some of our more popular bulbs, and when I asked him how to read the graphs and results on his chart, he said
“The spectrographic analysis is simply a representation of the lamp’s output at hundreds of different wavelengths in the visible spectrum ranging from violet to deep red; the spectrum of this bulb shows a lower than normal “blue” peak (this is light emission from the actual LED die under the phosphor) and a higher than usual phosphor emission - this is what helps define it as “WARM white” rather than the cooler (bluer) white found in most other LED products including light bulbs…so yes, that’s a GOOD thing when you advertise the bulb as “warm white”. :-)….The beam cross-sectional analysis isn’t nearly as necessary, but shows (along with the photographs) that this bulb has a very wide viewing angle - also a good thing to have in a light bulb. “
His site is a little bit old school design-wise, but you could spend hours looking at all the different things he’s reviewed. Check out what he said for our HP-10 Globe, HP-3 Mini-Flood, and our new LumiStick.