Hi!
Pool being drained and refilled. 17 yr old lights, I was going to replace all three lights since water will be down.
Replacing incandescent to the Pentair Intellibrite 5G is in their estimate per my request.
Pricey, and more importantly, reviews here kinda stink (2017-2020). I don't want to be sitting outside with company and wondering why suddenly the red doesn't work.
SO QUESTION:
Calm down and take a chance on LED and that the tech is more reliable in 2022?
Go for the 12V low voltage version for increased life span?
OR
Replace with same incandescent Pentair Amerilite? Another manufacturer? (assuming niches are standard for other brands).
Then I could buy LED screw in bulbs with or without color changing feature if my wife calls for it. At least I can go back to incandescent if there is an LED problem. Still don't know how you change colors in these bulbs, have not researched shortcomings.
History
My Pentair Amerilite 400W bulb fixtures are 17 yrs old.
The single small spa light has never burned out.
#1 of 2 pool lights has needed one bulb change and the housing has never taken on water.
#2 of 2 pool lights has been my nemesis - new bulb every 1-2 years, water can be seen in the housing thru the lens 3-6 months after I service it.
Actually had great fun sealing the back of both pool lights with the marine epoxy repair I found on TFP. But #2 is a bugger. New gasket, silicone, careful tightening of the lens, and then prayer. Eventually leads to cursing.
This week for the first time the circuit tripped.
I'm done.
The pool has not brought me joy since the kids are gone. If it electrocutes me I'm gonna be ******!
Pool has to be drained and refilled after 17 yrs -- so new light time is now.
Not to be pulled by me! (refer back to "no joy" comment).
So I will pay pool guy mark up and install.
Humor
BTW, TFP should have a board where people can just vent about owning a pool.
You are all such devotees, and I have benefited from this group greatly.
It has made for interesting problem solving for me (to ward off Alzheimer's) and when people ask me if I have any hobbies, the answer is "Managing 23,000 gallons of water"
But are none of you conflicted?
Pool being drained and refilled. 17 yr old lights, I was going to replace all three lights since water will be down.
Replacing incandescent to the Pentair Intellibrite 5G is in their estimate per my request.
Pricey, and more importantly, reviews here kinda stink (2017-2020). I don't want to be sitting outside with company and wondering why suddenly the red doesn't work.
SO QUESTION:
Calm down and take a chance on LED and that the tech is more reliable in 2022?
Go for the 12V low voltage version for increased life span?
OR
Replace with same incandescent Pentair Amerilite? Another manufacturer? (assuming niches are standard for other brands).
Then I could buy LED screw in bulbs with or without color changing feature if my wife calls for it. At least I can go back to incandescent if there is an LED problem. Still don't know how you change colors in these bulbs, have not researched shortcomings.
History
My Pentair Amerilite 400W bulb fixtures are 17 yrs old.
The single small spa light has never burned out.
#1 of 2 pool lights has needed one bulb change and the housing has never taken on water.
#2 of 2 pool lights has been my nemesis - new bulb every 1-2 years, water can be seen in the housing thru the lens 3-6 months after I service it.
Actually had great fun sealing the back of both pool lights with the marine epoxy repair I found on TFP. But #2 is a bugger. New gasket, silicone, careful tightening of the lens, and then prayer. Eventually leads to cursing.
This week for the first time the circuit tripped.
I'm done.
The pool has not brought me joy since the kids are gone. If it electrocutes me I'm gonna be ******!
Pool has to be drained and refilled after 17 yrs -- so new light time is now.
Not to be pulled by me! (refer back to "no joy" comment).
So I will pay pool guy mark up and install.
Humor
BTW, TFP should have a board where people can just vent about owning a pool.
You are all such devotees, and I have benefited from this group greatly.
It has made for interesting problem solving for me (to ward off Alzheimer's) and when people ask me if I have any hobbies, the answer is "Managing 23,000 gallons of water"
But are none of you conflicted?

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