Bulbrite’s Solana Edison Is a Unique Smart Bulb You’ve Never Heard Of

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  • September 20, 2019

Andrew Heinzman

Bulbrite’s catalog of Solana smart bulbs contains a golden nugget—the Edison smart bulb. While Bulbrite isn’t well-known in the smarthome world (yet), I think this bulb is a great hub-less (and cheaper) alternative to Philips’ new Edison-style smart bulbs.

The Bulbrite Solana Edison bulb is, as you can tell, a filament-styled smart bulb that’s powered by LEDs. It produces 600 lumens of light with just 5 watts of power, fits on standard E26 light sockets, and has a 13.7-year life span (an oddly specific number, I know). And like most smart bulbs on the market today, Bulbrite’s Solana bulbs work without a hub.

This bulb feels different from any other smart bulb I’ve worked with. For one, it’s made out of glass, which is rare for smart bulbs. It’s also pretty lightweight for a smart bulb, and it can get surprisingly bright, probably because the LED “filaments” aren’t diffused by any kind of plastic.

These quirks make the Bulbrite Edison a perfect candidate for pedant lamps, chandeliers, or any other fixture that naturally diffuses light (assuming they’ll play nice with the Edison’s oblong shape). In fact, I’m willing to bet this is the only smart bulb on the market that won’t look tacky in an old-fashioned or romantic light fixture (although the Philips Hue Edison smart bulbs probably look great, too).

Close-ups of the Edison showing that it contains orange and blue LED strips.
Andrew Heinzman

When the bulb is on warm settings, the orange LED strips get brighter. On cool settings, the blue LED strips get brighter. This is standard practice for LED bulbs. But these strengths can also be weaknesses. Each “filament” of the Edison is just a string of orange or blue LEDs. This mix of orange and blue creates a “natural” white, and gives you the option to change color temperature. (An LED can emit only one wavelength of light at a time, so this is common practice.)

So when you use the Edison in an exposed fixture, like a ceiling fan or a Hollywood-styled bathroom vanity, it casts uneven licks of blue and orange light. Your feeling toward this phenomena is a matter of personal preference, but I’m willing to assume most people would prefer something more uniform. (Sure, you could do all orange or all blue, but the colors are pretty intense.)

The App Is Surprisingly Good

My experience with hub-less smart bulbs is that, while they’re not difficult to set up, the process is kind of tedious. LIFX and Wyze branded smart bulbs, for example, need to be connected to your phone one at a time.

So I assumed the Bulbrite Edison setup would be an equally time-consuming process, or that the Bulbrite app would completely suck (in the world of smarthomes, Bulbrite is still a no-name brand).

But hey, I was completely wrong.  The Bulbrite app (iOS, Android) is extremely user-friendly—I’d say it’s better than any of the other hub-less smart bulb apps I’ve used (which is weird, considering that Bulbrite isn’t nearly as popular as its smarthome competitors).

Screenshots of the Bulbrite app. It's surprisingly user-friendly, and it looks great too..
The Bulbrite app’s “temperature” settings page, home page, and scheduling menu. Andrew Heinzman

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