the bulbs store a lot of energy inside itself before passing the filament and when they unscrewed it, it would stay on for quite a while
The filament in the bulb (the thin tungsten wire inside) is heated with electricity and then it lights up. That is how incandescent bulbs work. (the old kind) CFL's (Compact Fluorescent Lights) work by a gas (possibly argon) is electrically charged and then the atoms give off light.
If you are asking for operation for old light bulbs. Then there is a tungsten filament is provided in the bulb which get heated on supplying power and emmits light and heat.
77 years old
It takes 4. One to screw in the light bulb, and 3 to talk about how good the old bulb was.
buy an appliance bulb from the light bulb store. unplug the fridge. Unscrew the old bulb. Screw in the new one.
The "The Centennial Light" 4 watt light bulb which was first lit in 1901 and is still in use today at a fire station in Livermore, California.
Three. One to change the bulb, and two to talk about how good the old bulb was.
You might have to go in through the trunk of the car to take the light cover and all of that out go to the store ask for a tail light for your model when you get the light DO NOT TOUCH THE BULB!!! This means you have a faulty bulb that you paid for if you touch it. The light bulb reacts with the heat from your fingers and goes faulty. Grab it by the aluminum or the metal at the bottom of the bulb and carefully slide it in back like your old bulb that you replaced try and copy what you saw with the old bulb.
you take the old bulb out and put in the other
He was around 30 years old.
77 years old
he invented the lightbulb in December 24,1877