Firstly, are you wearing sunglasses?
2007-04-18 05:10:18
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answer #1
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answered by Cheetahs 2
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Eddie, i think of you have had the respond right here already, if that's a case of strictly the two/or. i'm basically echoing others right here as quickly as I say that a call for dim lights is oftentimes right down to the female's shyness, as unfavourable to shunning a sturdy previous ogle of their important different - that's incredibly exceptionally agreeable to maximum individuals. The media has plenty to respond to for in making females sense they could try for the air-brushed perfection of action picture stars in magazines. additionally, of course, answerers like Maggie are spot on whilst they say mushy lights supplies the entire scene a much greater suitable atmosphere. I recommend, not many human beings of the two gender discover harsh strip lights captivating, truthfully? (with the plain exception of the "workplace lech", this is). So there you flow, EC. desire this sheds somewhat greater mild on the difficulty - heh heh. sturdy guy quezzy, mate.
2016-10-22 12:37:48
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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There is a possibility that the Neutral wire in the circuit has come lose and not making a firm contact with the terminl.i wud start there check them 1st. if its a new build i wudnt of thought that some 1 wud of wired the cuircuit in series thats not good practice at all if it is get sum 1 in to do it properly.
2007-04-20 02:47:13
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answer #3
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answered by Ace 2
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- Might be dust accumulated on lights during construction
- Might be the size of storge area is bigger, so the light looks dimmer
- Might be the color of walls make it look dimmer, e.g., black colored walls compared to whote colored walls when light was tested
- Might be some dust particles still in the air
2007-04-18 05:31:39
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answer #4
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answered by Jay 1
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Could be anthing. Assuming you don't have an electrical problem, and you didn;'t paint it, the stuff you haev inside probably just doesn't reflect the light the same way.
2007-04-18 05:29:59
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answer #5
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answered by Gene 7
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Maybe you have an increased electrical load causing the voltage to dip.
Could it be cooler, fluorescents don't like the cold.
2007-04-18 08:50:26
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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Are the lights wired in series or in parallel?
2007-04-19 22:58:26
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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