I'm trying to track down what is using so much energy around the house and have been slowly working my way through checking what I can. In my basement over my washer and dryer I have a nook with 2 40 florescent tubes. It's old, from the early 70's when I built the walls and tucked it up out of sight. Put my kilowatt meter on it and found it is using 100w. the 2 bulbs add up to 80 so the extra 20 is heat in the ballast.
I'm wondering if the new electronic ballasts are much more energy efficient, enough to warrant replacing the older ones. This light is on a timer and it's on 14 hours a day, seems I picked up a replacement for one of the other lights for $8 or $10 a year ago. If I cut the power loss in half I'd save about $5 a year , so a 2 year payback based on it wasting 10 watts instead of 20. Does anyone know how much more efficient the new electronic ballasts are?
I'm wondering if the new electronic ballasts are much more energy efficient, enough to warrant replacing the older ones. This light is on a timer and it's on 14 hours a day, seems I picked up a replacement for one of the other lights for $8 or $10 a year ago. If I cut the power loss in half I'd save about $5 a year , so a 2 year payback based on it wasting 10 watts instead of 20. Does anyone know how much more efficient the new electronic ballasts are?