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Fit traditional fluorescent ceiling strip lights with LED lights, which use less electricity.
Also known as strip or channel lights, the ends of these fixtures are designed to be wired together to create long rows of lights.
Upgrade your fluorescent recessed lighting to energy-efficient LEDs without removing fixtures and exposing insulation.
Link these lights together to create different shapes with a sleek look.
Install sockets for medium (standard household) screw-in base light bulbs.
Also known as pigtail holders. Temporarily wire these sockets to provide light during construction.
Brighten your ISO Class 3 clean room with long rows of lights—you can wire these lights together at the ends. They have an airtight seal that keeps contaminants from entering your space.
Upgrade your traditional fluorescent washdown lights—these LEDs last longer and eliminate the need to replace bulbs.
Replace worn sockets in light fixtures.
Lock bulbs in place to prevent vibration from shaking them loose.
Revive your fluorescent strip lights. These sockets replace aging ones and eliminate the need for ballasts.
Hardwire these sockets to a power source.
Turn an overhead outlet or an extension cord into a temporary light. These sockets have a two-prong plug for a quick connection.
Create temporary light wherever you need it. Just screw in a bulb and plug the socket into any two-prong outlet. The 15 ft. cord gives you ample distance from your outlet.
Conceal wire while connecting lamp components.
Fasten lamp pipe to a socket or base to build or repair lamps. The nuts and washers in these kits fit the NPSM threading found on lamp pipe.
Use these extenders when bulbs are too short to fit into deep or recessed fixtures.
Double your light output by installing two bulbs in place of one.
Stop vibration from shaking tubular fluorescent and LED bulbs loose.
Pull the chain to send a switch signal. These switches are commonly used as replacements in lights and fans.
Connect one end to a fixture and the other to a ballast. These connectors allow you to safely disconnect a failed ballast without exposing you to live wires.