What is the best way to determine quality for lightbulbs? Brand names like Phillips? As I'm sure that just buying the most expensive isn't going to be a guarantee of high quality. What should I look for in a good quality bulb?
Good question, and of course not so easy to answer. However, there are a few tell-tales that usually come with cheap stuff.
First of all, avoid the cheap/cheapest eBay stuff you can find. Buying a bulb that allegedly has 40 watts from eBay for 5 bucks is surely going to be nothing more than a spohisticated chinese firecracker (sometimes litrally).
Next, while there are rare exceptions, try to avoid bulbs that are made of lots of standard 5mm LED's. Those are usually cheap LED's (you can buy a pack of 100 for 3 bucks or so, after all), wired in string(s) with a cheap current limiting resistor. Those bulbs and lamps have several problems. One is that they use cheap, single low-power LED's. Each of them has a (sometimes reather high) difference in how much light they emit (and what colour temperature). Then, if one single LED fails in a long string, the whole string goes off.
Then, get the bulb in your hand and physically check it. Does it have cheap, soft plastics that bend easily? Is the transparent cover not really a tight/strong fit (i.e. does it seem as if it can come loos or break easily)? Does the bulb/lamp have exposed contatcs or solder joints on/in the LED array that are possible to touch? If one LED fails, you have the full line voltage at that point, only going donw once a circuit (possibly through your body) is made, and then possibly only limited by a cheap resistor.
Good LED modules come on an aluminium carrier. There are multiple tiny LED chips mounted on that carrier, coverd by a single, thin blob of some (often yellow-ish coloured) silicone (edit: silicone-like, i meant). They are more expensive to produce, since a failure of a single LED chip on them makes the whole module go to the garbage bin. They cost more to use because they need some form of good cooling.
If you can afford some bucks for toying around, open up the LED lamps you got. If they have a switchmode supply they are usually much safer and better. That is because such a supply costs some money, compared to a cheap resistor.
The whole market is rapidly moving currently. I'm not that much into what brands are good and which are not, i simply build such stuff myself (what with electronics being my hobby and job and all that).
But more often than not, the usual rule applies: if it looks cheap, and if it is sold cheap, then it is cheap crap. And seriously, the problem with line powered devices it not so much the looks, or if there is a bit less light than with other products. The issue is that these thing _really_ pose a fire hazard and/or can threaten your life due to electrical shock. While even the cheapest switchmode supply is usually better than just a drop resistor, the problem with cheap switchers is that they are, well, cheap. Look at the innards of some cheap wall-wart style chargers/supplies that you can get, for example, from DealExtreme. There simply is no snowballs chance in hell that these things would comply with even the loosest of "western" safety standards.
Amd usually you get that exact same level of quality in cheap LED bulbs, just that that crap is now integrated into the bulb, instead of being an external plug...
Greetings,
Chris