Saturday, February 11, 2012

Westinghouse T00412 Light Switch Remote

!±8± Westinghouse T00412 Light Switch Remote

Brand : Westinghouse | Rate : | Price : $12.38
Post Date : Feb 11, 2012 20:00:38 | Usually ships in 24 hours


This Westinghouse indoor wireless remote control light switch is a great solution to all those hard to reach devices. The wall plate transmitter mounts easily to the wall and works through wall, door, and glass up to 50ft. Batteries are included for the transmitter.Wireless Remote Control Light Switchmounts easy to the wallTransmitter battery includedLED IndicatorWorks through wall, door, glass up to 50ft.

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Saturday, February 4, 2012

PWM Dimming Controller For LED Lights or Ribbon, 12 Volt 8 Amp, 3301

!±8±PWM Dimming Controller For LED Lights or Ribbon, 12 Volt 8 Amp, 3301

Brand : LEDwholesalers LED Strip Lights
Rate :
Price :
Post Date : Feb 04, 2012 04:51:20
Usually ships in 24 hours



Product Information Dimmer is a controller that it can adjust brightness infinitely,its control mode is knob-operated control, you could adjust light to the appropriate lighting brightness in accordance with your actual need. Technical parameters ? Working temperature: -20-60 ? ? Supply voltage: DC12V ?Output: 1 channel ? External dimension: L89 ? W59 ? H35 mm ? Packing size: L96 ? W64 ? H65 mm ? Net weight:8 5 g ? Gross weight: 10g ? Static power consumption: <1 W ? Output current: <8 A ? Max. output: 96 W

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Saturday, January 14, 2012

Daft Punk Christmas Light Show

My last year doing this before college. The lights are synced to the song "Harder, Better, Faster, Stronger." 12000 lights and a mile of extension cords make up my 2010 light show. Not your typical standard Christmas song...but who wants standard? "Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use."

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Wednesday, January 11, 2012

A highly-addictive Christmas lights and music show in Wilmette

My daughter Val and I headed over to the corner of Cleveland St and Thornwood Ave in Wilmette, planning to spend a few minutes seeing the Christmas lights. We stayed nearly an hour, repeatedly saying "let's see what's next" and "just one more." What held our interest was more than 30000 dancing lights orchestrated by 112 channels of computer-controlled animation, the spectacular work of Steve Maris, who spent three months programming it. The show kicked off on December 16th with a fundraising party for Children's Memorial Hospital. It runs weekdays from 5 to 10 pm, and weekends until 11, closing New Year's Eve with a special show from 4:30 to midnight. Merry Christmas and happy holidays to all from YoChicago.

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Friday, January 6, 2012

Bubble Lights - A True Retro Christmas Classic

!±8± Bubble Lights - A True Retro Christmas Classic

No type of vintage Christmas decoration is more of a retro classic than bubble lights, the fascinating heat-activated ornaments that brought a unique sparkle to the holiday decor of the post-war period.

Bubble lights for use in eye-catching display signs were invented in the 1930s and variations were actually patented by several people as early as 1936. But the man whose design became the basis for the popular holiday ornaments was Carl Otis, a hobbyist inventor who worked as an accountant for retailer Montgomery Ward. His firm declined to support or purchase rights to his invention, however, and he eventually sold it to a Christmas lights manufacturer called NOMA.

As early as mid-1940s the lights were being sold in both the US and Europe, and by the 1950s they had become wildly popular. Though the original light sets were expensive, heavy, breakable, and temperamental, they were a holiday must-have and just about everyone who can recall the fifties and sixties will remember a string or two of bubble lights in a place of honor on the Christmas tree.

There was always a period of anticipation - often accompanied by some judicious tapping and repositioning - between plugging them in and seeing the first bubbles, but once they were going the effect was outstanding. Fortunately, modern reproductions are lighter, more durable, and more reliable, but they still work on the same principle.

The Science Behind The Bubbles

Bubble light ornaments are actually a surprisingly complex and scientific creation, consisting of two parts: an electrified base unit, which holds a small incandescent light bulb, over which a slender, pointed fluid-filled vial or tube is affixed.

In the classic fifties lights the base was generally made of two-tone ribbed plastic, with the bowl that held the bulb in one color and the lid or cap in a different color. The vial was usually heavy glass, most commonly clear or amber colored, but also manufactured in shades of blue, red, or violet. In modern sets the vial is often made of durable acrylic, which makes them lighter and more break-resistant.

The vial is filled with a fluid that has a low boiling point. The earliest lights used lightweight oil, which was later replaced by the organic solvent methylene chloride. When the lights are plugged in, the heat of the small incandescent bulb brings the fluid a boil and the bubbles rise and float up the vial, creating a fascinating movement and sparkle.

New Variations On An Old Favorite

Though the basic premise behind bubble lights remains unchanged, modern innovations have introduced changes that only increase their appeal. New versions of the popular lights are made of rugged, lightweight materials like acrylics that resist breaking and cracking, and the light-holding bases are often shaped like characters.

The lights have also been successfully miniaturized; the originals were generally four or more inches long from the tip of the vial to the bottom of the base, but "mini bubblers" as small as two inches in length are now available.


Bubble Lights - A True Retro Christmas Classic

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