I’m interested in getting some insight from people who actually used both of the above bulbs about the pros and cons of SunLike10xss SOL Ultra High CRI vs. Waveform Lighting A19 Centric Home/Daylight (specifically 4K color temperature).
From what I’ve gathered the price range seems similar on both bulbs - with SunLike costing around $4 more per bulb + $6 shipping fee. When purchasing several bulbs at a time the shipping fee doesn’t really increase price per bulb since you pay only $6 per order, not per bulb. Additionally, if you get the SOL version (which seems to have higher quality output compared to SAW) the cost comes down to $19 per bulbs. So it’s really only a $1 difference in price between the two bulbs. However, if you buy WaveForm in pack of 6 the cost per bulb comes down to $14.80 which is $5+ less per bulb so it is a significant savings compared to SunLike.
WaveForm ships from the USA so it is likely to arrive much faster than SunLike which might take a couple of weeks to arrive. However, this is only a problem if one is in a rush. I think the main question is about the quality of light produced and whether it is noticeably easier on the human eye.
According to the specs Waveform Lighting has CRI of 95+ and of only R9 80+ (which is significantly lower than SunLike) but the spreadsheet: BLF - Ultimate LED Bulbs - CRI Qfactor - Google Sheets gives it a score of: Ra = 98 which is significantly higher than the score stated on the manufacturer website. Which is correct?
One thing that stands out about the SunLike 10 is the size. It is significantly bigger than WaveForm. However, personally I’d be willing to accept bigger size for better output.
Does anyone have experience with both of the mentioned bulbs? What do you think are the pros/cons of each one to consider before buying?
For those who own SunLike 10 are there any negatives with the bulb? Based on the above thread it seems that SunLike 10 is the pinnacle of ideal bulb. Do you concur?
@maukka has done VERY thorough hands on reviews of both. The results of his testing are my ‘source of truth’ for the actual performance of each, before they’re in my own hands.
For home lighting, SunLike’s big advantage is the lack of the infamous blue hump that is present in the Waveform bulbs. The tradeoff is about 10-15% efficiency (lumens per watt), and as you noted, physical size.
One thing of note about Sunlike’s bulbs is that they tend to be above the black body line (so more of a green orange tint vs rosy tint), but only slightly, and this can be more down to preference, though the general consensus seems to be that rosy is more aesthetically pleasing to most.
Also, and this is an advantage to a more boutique type of shop like Sunlikelamp, he’ll do a combination of CCTs (called tint mixing). That will always result in a lower duv (rosier tint) than any one CCT by itself.
If someone interesting why waveform sucks, here is article — https://sundaylamp.com (use translator)
Any bulbs must work about 2000 hours. 1-2 years and go to trash
About SOL 4000k (Smart Eco Lighting co. ltd.), it is the best, but for eyes in real life all SunLike LEDs will be awesome (SOL, SAW, smd SOL, smd SAW), you can not find difference by your eyes
I have bought Waveform, I liked the Photo Grade 3000K, it had great color and tint. However, it stopped working after about 3 years, so I went back to incandescent.
Yeah I think I’m steering away from waveform just because I heard that it is lighter notioning that the heat sink is smaller compared to yujii bulbs.
I think I also read that some of these lights are by Design built with certain cheap components that are designed to fail after 3 years
But I’m willing to take a Gamble on the Yuji lights and see what my mileage is.
Also I meant to say in my previous post that the owner of Yuji used to work for waveform lighting.
It appears that the sunlight brand will ultimately last the longest and perform well but it’s big and bulky and somewhat awkward looking and has limited models for certain form factors