Scottie said:Normally, a 0.5 PF would mean a severe disbalance in the grid (say, if we're talking about an inductive or capacitive load). But an LED bulb at 0.5 PF is simply not using half the AC cycle, but otherwise it's prolly pretty close to a resistive load when it's conducting (i.e. lit up). If it's basically "off" or "mostly resistive", then is that really 0.5PF in the traditional sense? Which is why I don't understand the push for higher PF bulbs in the USA...
Answering myself:
Okay, if only half the AC cycle is used, then what happens with the other half? Nothing! That might be problematic - at least from an electric company's POV.
On the other hand, what if half the 0.5 PF bulbs used the "top half" of the AC waveform, and the other 50% of bulbs used the "bottom half"? On average, it would balance out. Maybe...
But from MY point of view, I only pay for power used, and the simpler design isn't generating all the extraneous noise / EMF.
But we still have the capacitive coupling issue, which is basically "unknown".