Ivan Seeking said:
I don't think it can be treated so simply. How do you directly relate the energy of mnfc to cost?
Because if that wasn't part of the cost of the lamp, the company who manufactured it wouldn't turn a profit.
Can we assume that it takes eight times as much energy to make a CF?
No, it has to be less than that since it also takes more labor/time/materials - but the cost is in there.
Also, if I am paying to heat my house [literally 75% of the time] anyway, what is the advantage?
What do you use to heat your house? I use propane, so the energy cost is only a little higher for electricity (maybe 20%). If you use natural gas, the difference is more like 50%.
Also, because of the fact that air conditioning takes more energy than heating, you probably lose as much in the summer as you gain in winter. For most people in the northeast, with gas heat and summer electric bills about equal to their winter heating bills, the balance is tipped toward losing more in the summer.
Also, what is the inductance/capacitance of CFs as compared to incandescents? High L or C can result in additional line losses from the supply.
Residential users don't pay for power factor...because it isn't significant. (but yes, incandescents are essentially 100% resistive). Also, newer lamps use electronic instead of magnetic ballasts, and they are much better on the reactance:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electrical_ballast
I keep thinking that for cold weather country, the advantage might wash out when all is considered.
It certainly lengthens the payback, but unless you use zero air conditioning and heat your house with electric resistance, the payback is still there. Feel free to play with your own numbers - it is a useful exercise that I do from time to time...
Oh yes, and I am interested in the actual energy savings, not the financial cost to me.
Energy or pollution? Regardless, besides the obvious reason of it effecting us more directly, I prefer using the money because of the difficulty in translating the energy of electricity into the energy in the resources it came from. Ie, if your electricity is primarily hydro (which it could be, where you live), it is essentially free (in the thermodynamic and pollution sense, not the financial one). But even then, if there was extra hydro power, they'd just sell it to another electric company that makes up their peak load with gas turbines at 50% efficiency or so (this is the fallacy of many "green energy" companies). So it is probably best to just take the fractions of all the types of electricity for the comparison...
Reconciling all that is extremely complicated.
Besides, energy is a commodity, so the watts and $$ tend to even out. But if it is the pollution you are worried about, you'll have to do that national energy balance calculation...