• expired

Philips Master LED MR16 420 Lumens 7W Dimmable 2700K Retrofit 60D $9.90 (RRP $29.95) + Postage @ Melbourne Electronic

70

High quality halogen downlight replacement

The Philips Master LED MR16 7 Watt is a direct replacement for all 'low voltage' downlights. Here's why we think it's the best retro-fit bulb on the market:

Same brightness as 50 Watt halogens (giving you over 85% energy savings).
Fully dimmable and compatible with existing transformers.
You can replace it yourself - no electrician required.
2700K is a warm white 
60 degree
Dimensions: 50.5mm (width) x 50.5mm (depth)

There are countless MR16 LED's on the market that simply do not deliver. Short lifetime, poor colour temperature and transformer problems to name a few.

Once your Philips Master LED's have arrived, all you need to do is swap the globes.

These lights will work with your existing fittings, dimmer switches and transformers. In rare cases they may not work properly with some electronic transformers (generally less than 5% of the market).

Limited stock, Pickup welcomed from showroom
MelbourneElectronic.com.au
Address: Unit 3 / 5 Commercial Drive Lynbrook Vic 3975 AU
Open hours: MONDAY to FRIDAY 10am-4pm

Related Stores

Melbourne Electronic
Melbourne Electronic

closed Comments

  • +1

    I paid this price 3 years ago. Still work fine with daily ~6 hours usage, not very bright.

    • +4

      The current buyer or the light?

      • I find these MR16 replacements to be not as bright as what they really state. They're closer to 35W halogen, not 50w halogen

        • 420 lumens is not super bright.
          It's equivalent to a 30w incandescent bulb (approx).
          450lm is equivalent to 40w bulb (which seems to be stocked on their website).

          If you wanted 50w of light, you need 750lm.

          50W is a bit of stretch, unless your bulbs were deep within a tube fitting with no reflective material. Watt is really deceptive when talking about light output. An inefficient bulb will generate lots of heat and not much light.

  • I gather the difference between the 4000K and the 2700K is white light vs warm light.

    What's the difference between the 2700K vs 3000K ones? both warm light but the 3000K ones are brighter?

    • +1

      thanks for looking
      the 2700k is a standard incandescent color and 3000k is a halogen light color
      a picture is better than thousand words
      may i suggest you to google 'color temp'
      and you should be able to pull up a lot of images fyi.
      cheers

      • +1

        ah its a color thing, thanks for answering :)

Login or Join to leave a comment