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Fluorescent Tubes
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Bulbs
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Task, Desk, and Floor Lamps
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Light Boxes
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Full Spectrum Lighting improves your indoor
environment - you'll be amazed at the
difference! It makes reading easy - colors
are more accurate, fabric and paint
differences are more clearly seen.
These lights reduce the glare that causes eyestrain, a great
improvement for people with vision difficulties.
When used around computers and television,
the light helps to reverse the cathode soft x-
ray radiation effects that result in drowsiness.
They save 80% on energy costs and last 10
times as long (10,000 to 33,000 hours) as
incandescent lights.
We feature three
different styles of lamps designed for
computer and office use, studying, crafts,
sewing, reading, or shop use. We also have
screw-in bulbs that will fit with most regular
fixtures and most standard sizes of
fluorescent tubes.
These products are an absolute must for
students and anyone using a computer -
they are life enhancing for indoor pets
and your plants will benefit significantly!
This type of lighting is essential for
maintaining your health and eyesight.
IMPORTANT INFORMATION: Eyestrain is
the number one health concern of workers in
America. Eyestrain can begin in less than
twenty minutes under incandescent, halogen
and fluorescent light. The more closely we
can approximate daylight, the less fatigue and
irritation we experience. This is especially
true for reading and computer work.
Full spectrum lighting helps reduce eyestrain even
over hours of exposure. It eliminates the
stressful effects that the yellowish
incandescent, fluorescent and halogen light
has on the body's nerve endings. This results
in reduced fatigue, superior concentration and
an overall calmer feeling. Just compare
reading under your standard lighting and
under full spectrum light and you will
immediately notice how little glare there is
and how crisp and clear the letters are.
Full spectrum light closely simulates sunlight and
therefore can be used to improve conditions
that result from a lack of sunlight, especially
during the darker winter months. Winter blues and
Seasonal Affected Disorder (S.A.D.) are examples of this.
Full spectrum lights are extremely energy
efficient, produce very little heat and will fit in
most household and office fixtures. They are
also ideal for fixtures that have low wattage or
power safety requirements.
LIGHT ENERGY features Full Spectrum Light
products developed by lighting pioneer
Dr. John Nash Ott, plus the most
advanced light boxes in the world from
American Environmental Products, and
additional products from other highly
rated manufacturers. All of our Full Spectrum Light
products have a 30-day money back guarantee and a one-year warranty.
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How Much Sunlight Do I Need?
Experience shows that the body needs a
minimum of 30 minutes a day,
ideally 2 hours. This will keep the
body functioning well, however it
must be renewed daily. You don't
store the sun's energy. Therefore,
during dark winter days, when you
are indoors a lot, full spectrum lights
can help supply this need for
sunlight. Light with a brightness of
2500 lux for up to 6 hours, over the
day, will generally supply the
minimum requirement.
Why Do I Feel Tired Under
Most Artificial Lighting?
The yellow color of most lighting
irritates the nerve endings of your
skin and keeps you in a constant
state of low-grade stress. Full
spectrum lighting does not have this
effect. In addition, if your regular
lights are fluorescent, they flicker 60
times per second. This flicker is just
above your visual limit of 45 times
per second. So while you don't
always notice it consciously, it is still
acting as an irritation to your body.
Using “electronic” ballasts can
eliminate this flicker. These ballasts,
in your light fixtures, boost the flicker
rate up to 25,000 times per second.
What Causes Glare when
Reading Under
Artificial Lighting?
The yellow color from incandescent,
halogen and fluorescent lights does
not absorb into white paper, but
bounces back creating glare and
eyestrain. This does not occur in
sunlight, nor under full spectrum
lighting.
How Can Light Counteract
Radiation from Computer
Terminals and Unshielded
Fluorescent Tubes?
Computers, TV's, and fluorescent lights are
cathode-ray devices and as such
radiate soft x-rays up to three feet.
These rays penetrate the body and
cause iron in the hemoglobin of the
blood to clump. This reduces oxygen
flow and results in drowsiness.
When sunlight or full spectrum light
enters the eyes, it is transmitted
throughout the body, including the
bloodstream, where it causes an
unclumping of the blood
counteracting the adverse effect.
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Light from the sun - A nutrient that travels at
the speed of 186,000 miles a second from a
source 93 million miles away and rates with
pure food, water and air as a part of the life
support system on earth.
But light also comes from manufactured
sources, and therein lies a number of
problems. The wrong kind of artificial light can
make students irritable in school, reduce
production among factory workers, and make
office workers sluggish and prone to error.
Scientific studies show that not getting
enough light can interfere with calcium
absorption in the body and contribute to brittle
bones. Low levels of outdoor light and
ineffective artificial light indoors can also lead
to Seasonal Affected Disorder (S.A.D.) and winter
blues.
The light that some scientists consider a
super nutrient is full spectrum light, which
comes from the sun or is simulated from
specially designed full spectrum fluorescent
tubes and high spectrum bulbs. Normal
incandescent and halogen bulbs, as well as
most fluorescent tubes, produce an
overabundance of yellow and orange
wavelengths. These are hard on the human
nervous system. The glare produced by these
lights is very hard and irritating on the eyes.
The full spectrum light rating is designated by two
factors: The first is Color Rendering Index
(CRI), which designates the proportions of
each color contained within the light. The
second is Kelvin Heat Rating (degrees Kelvin). Natural
outdoor light has a CRI of 100 and a Kelvin
rating of 7500 degrees Kelvin. Although there are no legal
guidelines, 5000 degrees Kelvin and 90 CRI (or above) is
considered full-spectrum. In comparison,
standard cool white fluorescent has a CRI of
68 while warm white fluorescent is 56 CRI.
Standard incandescent bulbs have a 40 CRI.
Under natural light or full spectrum light, that
duplicates natural light, there is better visual
acuity and increased production and
accuracy. Students and office workers
experience far less fatigue and chance of
error. Absenteeism due to illness is
decreased and people generally have more
energy. When Data Control of Kansas City
redesigned their facility using full spectrum
light they experienced a savings of $235,000
annually from reduced computer errors by the
employees who were entering the data.
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