| The thing I’ve always been wondering about CFLs is about why they never looked like a linear fluorescent tube in color or even in light pattern (CFLs produced harsher shadows, similar shadows to a standard snow cone LED or a soft white incandescent). The light color also never matched a linear fluorescent tube, which I find interesting. Warm white CFLs don’t look like warm white fluorescents, even daylight CFLs don’t look like daylight fluorescent tubes. The 2700K CFLs seem to have a more noticeable fluorescent hue than the 5000K counterparts (which is pretty ironic). Some of the soft white CFLs had a noticeable pinkish hue or an abnormally yellow tint that just isn’t seen on LEDs, and that pinkish hue is also sometimes seen on warm white fluorescent tubes.
Instead, a warm white CFL looks almost like a cheaper warm white LED at full brightness (if it’s a higher quality model). A daylight (5000K) CFL looks like a 5000K LED. 5000K LEDs used to be bluer than the CFL counterparts but newer 5000K LEDs seem to match the older 5000K CFLs better.
Maybe a smaller tube makes the light and phosphor more concentrated? Don’t know. But, when I see a daylight CFL in a light with an opaque enclosure on it, I do not assume CFL at first glance, I’ll assume it is an LED unless I look at the bulb, or if I turn it off, and see it warm up. Those are my only ways to tell. If there are actually daylight CFLs in globes I cannot turn off then I’ll just assume it’s an LED the whole time. A linear 5000K tube, on the other hand, does have a true fluorescent look, both T8 and T12. 5000K tubes are also more of a pure white while 5000K LEDs and CFLs have kind of a hit of blue.
Many lower quality LEDs have a very similar to light quality and color to CFLs (if the CFL is at full brightness). 4100K CFLs look more like 4100K LEDs than 4100K fluorescent tubes.
Some of the 2700K CFLs, especially cheap or early models, have fluorescent casts to them though, such as a pinkish color. The early TCP’s (the ones branded n:vision and commercial electric) had a very yellowish color that looked very much fluorescent. Some of the older GE’s also had an abysmal yellow color to them.
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« Last Edit: May 05, 2026, 09:45:57 AM by Lightingeye60 »
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