What's the difference between the brand goods of led fluorescent lamps?
The LED fluorescent lamp industry is currently in chaos, and peers complain about the difficulty of doing business. What are the reasons?
1. For large brand led fluorescent lamps. Foreign brands such as Philips and Osram have relatively high prices.
For domestic brands, such as Foshan Lighting, Sanxiong Aurora, NVC Lighting, the price is slightly lower. The price/performance ratio is also good for other brands such as Langte.
2. When the market competition is becoming increasingly fierce, some domestic brands have also begun to make low-priced LED tubes, the price is very low, more than 20 yuan, what is the quality? Consumers know.
3. In the early days, most of the materials used in led fluorescent tubes were brand-name products. For example, the exported led tube lamp beads used Japanese brand Nichia, and Korean brand, Samsung. Domestic LED lamp beads use Taiwanese brands, Lumins, Epistar, Kellett, etc. At that time, the quality of the led tube was pretty good.
With the increase of LED lamp bead packaging factories, many factories have begun to use domestic LED lamp beads, that is, lamp beads without a brand, and the price has dropped drastically. The price of led lamp beads has dropped from a few cents to a few cents. Because the lamp beads account for a large proportion of the cost, the overall cost has dropped. What about the power supply? It has everything from high-end isolated power supply to resistance-capacitance power supply. Therefore, the price gap of led lamps is huge.
The market is so intense. Bargains are all the rage. Even some brand LED fluorescent lamp manufacturers are making bargains. For example, many manufacturers make glass and all-plastic LED tubes, which seriously hinder heat dissipation and shorten their life span, which are short-sighted behaviors. The so-called branded goods are meaningless.
The market has developed to this day, and finally someone is refreshed. Many customers propose not to be cheap, but to have good quality. A wake-up call for manufacturers who sell bad goods




