• @[email protected]
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    369 months ago

    If it was actually 200 watts it would probably outpower the heat transfer capacity of the fridge.

    • @[email protected]
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      9 months ago

      If it’s led 200w equivalent then it’s fine.

      Those max ratings are for incandescent bulbs

    • @stevestevesteve
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      209 months ago

      Maybe, but the light only turns on when it’s open, and when it’s open you have bigger cooling issues than the bulb wattage

        • @bitchkat
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          129 months ago

          I pressed the little plunger the door hits when I was about 7.

          • @dustyData
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            39 months ago

            You were deductive, cool. I was in an more empiricist household. So we shove the smallest cousin into the fridge and locked the door, then we ask him to recount his experience. He confirmed that phenomenologically speaking, the light does indeed appears to go out when you shut the door.

    • @Dasus
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      99 months ago

      Probably yeah.

      (am gonna use European standards here sorry Ameribruvs.)

      Also, 200w bulbs that fit into fridge socket? The “40w max” is usually in normal E27 sockets. (The regular light bulb socket.) And the largest lamps for those I’ve seen are around 50-80w, and pretty much always sold as “growlamps”.

      Going to 200w you’d need an E40 socket. They’re about twice the size of the “regular” E27 (and E14 is the smaller “candle” socket, that’s like half the diameter of the regular one). Here’s what a 200w bulb looks like and remember that the socket is twice the size of a regular one. That bulb is like ~40cm long.

      Idk what socket fridges use though, but I seriously doubt it’s anything close to an E40 size.

      • @Trollception
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        89 months ago

        100 and 120 watt incandescent lamps were common as well at E27

        • @Dasus
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          29 months ago

          Common?

          If we’re talking just at home, I’d have to disagree. But yeah I think probably fairly commonplace for industrial use maybe?

          I don’t recall ever seeing a single one being sold back when I used to be sent out for lightbulbs, because incandescents popping so often were a designed feature and as a kid I wasn’t going into proper hardware stores.

          40w and peeeerhaps 60w would be the most common ones, I’d say. Might vary ofc depending on where and who and when. But for like general house use in Finland I’d say those were definitely the most common ones. I’m guessing that’s sort of why lamps have the “most 40w” so that people use at most the 40w incandescent if someone still has those? Because newer ones draw so much less, there’s no need to design the schematics so that it can take 120w when most LED bulbs range from 7-15.

          I’m talking 40% of my arse so please do correct me for the mistakes I think I must have made

          • @baelem
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            39 months ago

            E27 100w incandescent bulbs were common in the US until the switch to LED. Looks like you can even still buy them, but at this price I’m guessing they’re new old stock that’s been hoarded to resell later: https://www.walmart.com/ip/GE-100-Watt-Basic-Light-Bulb-4-Pack-GE-41034-1710-lumen-A19/150144812

            Buuut the European grid runs at 230V, while the American grid runs at 120V (240V enters the home with a +120V and a -120V rail, and most circuits are attached across one of those and a neutral, except for high power appliance circuits).

            So our 100W bulbs are the equivalent of 50W European bulbs.

            I’m glad everything’s labeled in lumens now.

            • @Dasus
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              39 months ago

              Oh right, true, forgot about that.

              Yeah ours is 230v and high power connections like stoves can utilise up to 480v I believe.

              My sauna uses 400v for example.

              Lumens are simpler when it comes to lighting, yeah. No more “equivalent to X watts” bullshit from marketing people if the general public understood lumens.

              • @[email protected]
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                19 months ago

                I want to get a sauna, but I’m pretty sure my apartment is too small. I should get a cabin by the fjord so I can go from the sauna to the fjord.

                • @Dasus
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                  19 months ago

                  Here they come built-in to pretty much every apartment. Most apartment buildings built after like 1995 have them.

                  Even small student studios might have one.

                  I live in one of the worst areas in my city, in what is basically the cheapest available rental apartments. And I have a sauna.

                  And if your apartment doesn’t have one, the building certainly will and you can reserve it for yourself.

                  And all houses definitely have saunas.

                  We have more saunas than cars in Finland.

                  Sauna to cold fjord water would be great, highly recommend. (Though we don’t have fjords, we do have cold water.)

                  • @[email protected]
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                    19 months ago

                    Alas my apartment building is from the 70s. Also Norway isn’t as enlightened as Finland. I would also like a steady supply of that hard round rye bread with the caraway seeds, but I don’t have a car and I’m not taking the bus to kilpisjärvi for bread.

          • @aulin
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            9 months ago

            I bought 100 W lamps in normal stores in Sweden back before leds were as common. Good for light stages when taking pictures.

    • Echo Dot
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      39 months ago

      If it’s really a 200 watt bulb, which I doubt, it won’t actually pull 200 watts, that’s just what it would pull if it was available but I doubt the fridge will pass that through. It would be a pretty stupid design otherwise.