Not Light Bulbs, but 60W & 100W "Heatballs"
Not Light Bulbs, but 60W & 100W "Heatballs"
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Discussion

Alice Cupra

Original Poster:

1,034 posts

260 months

Friday 15th October 2010
quotequote all
Got to love the lateral thinking on this one

http://uk.news.yahoo.com/22/20101015/tsc-oukoe-uk-...

Yahoo News said:
A German entrepreneur is bypassing a European Union ban on light bulbs of more than 60 watts by marketing his own brand as mini heaters.

Siegfried Rotthaeuser and his brother-in-law have come up with a legal way of importing and distributing 75 and 100 watt light bulbs - by producing them in China, importing them as "small heating devices" and selling them as "heatballs."

To improve energy efficiency, the EU has banned the sale of bulbs of over 60 watts - to the annoyance of the mechanical engineer from the western city of Essen.

Rotthaeuser studied EU legislation and realised that because the inefficient old bulbs produce more warmth than light -- he calculated heat makes up 95 percent of their output, and light just 5 percent -- they could be sold legally as heaters.

On their website, the two engineers describe the heatballs as "action art" and as "resistance against legislation which is implemented without recourse to democratic and parliamentary processes."

Costing 1.69 euros each (1.49 pounds), the heatballs are going down well -- the first batch of 4,000 sold out in three days.

Rotthaeuser has pledged to donate 30 cents of every heatball sold to saving the rainforest, which the 49-year-old sees as a better way of protecting the environment than investing in energy-saving lamps, which contain toxic mercury.

Laurel Green

31,013 posts

255 months

Friday 15th October 2010
quotequote all
I can see some heated exchanges with the greenies. hehe

Dogwatch

6,365 posts

245 months

Friday 15th October 2010
quotequote all
£1.50 each! eek

freecar

4,249 posts

210 months

Friday 15th October 2010
quotequote all
It is still totally legal to sell 100W incandescent bulbs. Just check your local B&Q they must stock them for "worklights" and such!

Simpo Two

91,338 posts

288 months

Friday 15th October 2010
quotequote all
freecar said:
It is still totally legal to sell 100W incandescent bulbs. Just check your local B&Q they must stock them for "worklights" and such!
I have some 'laid down' for future sale when they get to £10 each nuts

Laurel Green

31,013 posts

255 months

Friday 15th October 2010
quotequote all
^^^^ hehe I too have a cupboard full of them - stocked up at Makro whilst still on the shelves.

AndyAudi

3,767 posts

245 months

Saturday 16th October 2010
quotequote all
I have some laid past too.

We do genuinely use them for the Heat Bulb purpose, It's common practice if you have a small water pump in a cupboard in an outhouse to use a lightbulb inside the cupboard to prevent the water pump freezing.

rovermorris999

5,316 posts

212 months

Saturday 16th October 2010
quotequote all
freecar said:
It is still totally legal to sell 100W incandescent bulbs. Just check your local B&Q they must stock them for "worklights" and such!
Ask for 'rough duty' or 'rough service' bulbs, I think 60w are still available too.

Edited by rovermorris999 on Saturday 16th October 16:38

Rocksteadyeddie

7,971 posts

250 months

Saturday 16th October 2010
quotequote all
The law of unintended consequences alive and well. hehe

spikeyhead

19,714 posts

220 months

Saturday 16th October 2010
quotequote all
Given that mostly lights are on when the heating is on, on those long cold winter evenings, then there's no benefit to using expensive chemical ridden bulbs that create less heat.