LED Flicker: The Hidden Headache
Do your LED lights make you feel weird? Or show stripes on your phone camera? Cheap drivers cause invisible strobe-flicker. How to fix it.
The Strobe Effect
Old incandescent bulbs glowed. The heat kept the light steady. LEDs are digital. They turn On and Off instantly. If the AC power (60Hz) isn't smoothed out by a good "Driver" (Power Supply), the LED flashes 120 times a second. Your eyes can't "see" it, but your brain processes it. Consequences: Eyestrain, Fatigue, Migraines.
The Test
- Phone Camera: Open your camera in Slow Motion mode. Point it at the light. If you see scrolling black bars or flashing, it has high flicker.
- The Wave: Wave your hand fast under the light. If your fingers look "choppy" (stroboscopic), it's flickering.
The Cause: Dimming
Flicker is worst on Dimmers. Cheap LEDs use "PWM" (Pulse Width Modulation) to dim—they achieve 50% brightness by turning off 50% of the time. This is terrible for your brain.
The Solution
- Buy High-Quality Bulbs: Philips "EyeComfort" or Waveform Lighting. Look for "Flicker Free" on the box.
- CCR Dimming: Use drivers that use Constant Current Reduction (reducing the flow of electricity) rather than PWM (chopping the flow).
- Smart Bulbs: Hue/LIFX bulbs have internal computers that manage power better than cheap dumb bulbs.
Summary
Light affects health. If you have chronic headaches at home, check your bulbs. Spending $10 on a bulb vs $2 is the difference between consistent light and a strobe light.
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