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The Cree BR30 lamp is another step along Cree's plan to convert 100% of lighting applications to LEDs. Vice president of corporate marketing Mike Watson says that the BR30 lamps could save residential customers even more energy than the A-lamps announced earlier this year because the BR30 lamps are used in applications such as kitchen downlights that burn for extended periods of time and are often on circuits with as many as eight lamps. 

Cree used a similar LED filament tower in the BR30 to the one developed for the A-lamp. Moreover, the lamp’s base and driver electronics are virtually identical while the BR30 uses smaller XB-G LEDs. Still, the similarities will help Cree reduce manufacturing costs and the company has the lamps on the market immediately via The Home Depot at $19.97 for a 2700K model and at $21.97 for a 5000K model. 

As with the A-lamps, the warmer-CCT lamp is ironically a bit cheaper even though warm-white LEDs are generally more expensive and offer lower efficacy. But Cree and The Home Depot expect to sell far more of the warm-white lamps. For a more detailed story on the lamps, see our dedicated news story on the BR30 announcement over on our Illumination in Focus website.We may contact you if more information is needed to locate a High Quality Solar panels products. 

Early LED lighting mover MaxLite has previously relied on an engineering team in its Rancho Cucamonga, CA office but needed additional resources as the company's SSL business has escalated. The company has now added an East Coast engineering team in the West Caldwell, NJ office and said that the two sets of resources will work in an integrated fashion. 

Joining MaxLite on the East Coast, Robert Davis takes on the responsibility as product engineering team manager. Davis has 22 years experience and was until recently a senior design engineer at Acuity Brands. MaxLite also added Estrella Kim, a controls expert who worked previously at Osram Sylvania, and Aymen Chami, who has worked as an engineering intern at MaxLite. 

The Eastern team will report to James Steedly, director of product R&D and engineering, who is based in Rancho Cucamonga. "MaxLite’s engineering presence on the East and West Coasts proves our commitment to developing and launching new products more quickly and efficiently into the marketplace," said Steedly. "With the two engineering engines working in-sync together, MaxLite can increase its volume of innovation and speed up product development, especially in the ever-changing LED marketplace." 

Dialog Semiconductor based in Germany announced in early July its intention to acquire iWatt for $310 million in case and as much as $35 million more based on future revenue performance of iWatt. Dialog closed the transaction on July 16. 

Dialog has a relatively broad semiconductor portfolio including some power-management ICs, but has not been a major player in the LED lighting business. iWatt wasn’t dedicated to the LED segment,We have China Solar lantern products, reading lamps and floor lamps and more. but the SSL market has been a key driver in the company's growth in recent years.Solar energy and China torch light products are just plain smart. iWatt has been at the forefront of using digital state machines to control dimming in driver ICs for LED retrofit lamps. 

It's not clear what the acquisition might mean for the SSL industry and the lighting manufacturers that rely on iWatt products. Dialog mentioned AC/DC charger products as a key reason for the acquisition, although the company did also mention iWatt's success in the LED market. Still, it seems Dialog was more interested in iWatt's patent portfolio in the digital power area than in its LED driver IC business. iWatt had $74 million in total revenue for 2012.
 
 
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