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HALO 30WATH 6-Inch Air Tite Trim, White

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$21.70

$ 9 .99 $9.99

In Stock

About this item

  • Use to make many recessed housings air-tite
  • Self-flange metal baffle with upper reflector
  • Torsion spring retention
  • Socket supporting baffle


Product Description

The Halo air-tite 6 In. Baffle trim features a White baffle design to reduce glare and a White trim ring to match many ceiling styles. This versatile trim can be used as a general down light. Can also be used as an accent light or for wall wash-lighting.

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Offering energy-efficiency, sturdy metal construction, and compatibility with a variety of lamps and housings, the Halo 30WATH Air-Tite baffle from Cooper Lighting has a white self-flanged trim with white baffle and clear reflector. Other features include torsion-spring construction and metal baffle construction.

It's compatible with the following Halo H7-model fixtures: T, TNB, RT, ICTNB, ICATNB, ICT, ICAT, RICT, and RICAT.

About Cooper Lighting

Cooper Lighting understands the power illumination holds to set moods, create ambience, enhance the workplace, and transform spaces — whether commercial, residential, or industrial. Fueled by their mission to be the leading provider of innovative, high-quality lighting fixtures, the company makes and manufactures everything from LED and fluorescent bulbs to exit and emergency, vandal-resistant, landscape, and complex environment lighting options to a worldwide marketplace. The company parents 20 exceptional brands, enjoying international industry leadership with a history of excellence that began in 1956.

30WATH 6-Inch Air Tite Trim, White

At a Glance
  • Makes installation air-tight regardless of housing used
  • White trim and baffle, clear reflector
  • 1-year warranty

Chris
Reviewed in the United States on April 21, 2015
Great fixture but for what it is (stamped metal) it should only cost about $8 retail. They only cost the manufacturer about $3 to make. The markup on these things are outrageous.
LG19Gamer
Reviewed in the United States on January 27, 2013
- Installed the Halo housing for the recessed lights in a basement project- Totally didn't realize I needed the trim, which fit easily into the housing (same brand)- I went online to see a demo of these being installed, once you see how it works it takes a couple minutes per light.- Fit well and look great!- Amazon price was competitive and with their return policy I decided to order from Amazon
C. MacPhail
Reviewed in the United States on July 3, 2012
.This tight-sealing, highly reflective trim kit fits 6-inch "ceiling cans."We use these trim kits with regular (A19) LED bulbs and the result is both pleasing and cost effective.It's very lightweight (5 oz), and build quality is marginal (see Note 1). You can tell these are flying out the (Chinese) factory door for maybe $2. I wish somebody would compete with Halo and provide a higher quality version at a lower price.PROs:- Energy wise - more useable light from your bulb- Tight seal - conserves heat & AC- Tight seal - thwart spiders & insects- Nice when replacing Halogen spotsOKs:- Does not create focused intensity like halogen spotsCONs:- Overpriced, for what it is- Marginal build quality (see Note 1)- - - Alternatives - - -- I wish. Please comment if you know of competing products.- - - Pricing - - -Amazon pricing holds very steady at 13.43. Rare dips under $9. There's an "Online Price Alert" that will email you whenever this or any amazon product dips below your target price. Google it. It's nicely done. Or try camelcamelcamel.- - - Notes - - -Note 1: Quality concerns:- The foam seal applied to the socket mount was mis-aligned and impossible to move- Previous HALO trim kits discolor and look bad after a few years. Parts of the trim turn from white to a brownish beige. I am not talking about grime. I am talking about product discoloration that no cleaner will solve.~~~ Comments & questions welcome ~~~
Abrianne
Reviewed in the United States on March 16, 2012
Bought 10 of these. 6 for halo 6 inch air tight recessed light cans and 4 for older seagull cans that were not airtight. This all started when I realized after moving in that the recessed lights in the kitchen were cheap non air tight and non insulation contact. ( another reviewer mentioned it but it truly is amazing how paying a home inspector $300 bucks to walk around a house for a couple hours seems like price gauging considering all the stuff that pops up later.) Swapped them out to halo H7ICAT cans and then needed affordable trim to go with them as the trim from the old cans barley would not fit. I didn't need airtight trim but these cost about the same as non airtight so I figured that a redundant back up measure wouldn't hurt. I happen to like that the inside of the trim is reflective. I also used a 75 watt replacement CFL bulb. The end result looks pretty good. I used the cfl's mostly because of the lower temperature that they operate at compared to standard incandesant bulbs. A good thing considering they are going to be buried in insulation. As previously noted I also was able to retrofit these to some seagull brand cans, so if you have some recessed lights that are not the halo brand but the can itself is similiar then you can probably still use these if you wanted. Another reviewer also noted that the flange part could be seperated from the reflective cone part and then could be painted. I will probably do this in the future using some krylon fusion spray paint. This will be economical considering that if you want something other than white trim you have pay top dollar to get it. As far as airtight goes I was not overly impressed with the trim or the H7ICAT cans as there is still some small gaps that will leak air, but this is a huge improvement over what I had. I think I read somewhere that airtight was measured at anything less than 2 CFM. I guess if you want total 100% airtight you go with something other than recessed lights. Leaking air through the ceiling seems to be the nature of the beast when comes to recessed lights.
PB Poysoning1
Reviewed in the United States on June 6, 2009
Purchased 8 of these to install in Halo H7ICT recessed light fixtures. They are easy to install, fit well, & should provide a good seal to prevent unconditioned attic air from entering conditioned spaces. The instructions that come with them could be a little more clear, but, installation can be easily figured out. The only drawback to using "airtight" trim pieces are the somewhat reduced lamp wattage that can be used in them (to prevent overheating). I advise taking note of the list of bulbs that the manufacturer recommends for these and making sure those bulbs will work for your application. I'm using 40 watt regular (A19) bulb and, because the 30WATH trim has a conical reflector, the light output is nice and bright. I recommend these to anyone interested in saving on heating and cooling costs.
J. Nicoletta
Reviewed in the United States on November 9, 2009
They went in easier than I expected, considering I was retrofitting 17-year old Juno fixtures. The only tricky part is detaching the lamp socket and squeezing it into the housing without tearing the gasket. If there is a flaw, it is the poorly placed, easily ripped gasket that seals between the socket and reflector. It's important to not man-handle the reflector or trim ring because they are pretty thin metal. I would also advise washing your hands after removing the old parts and before handling the new because dirt shows up really well on the white trim. And, as I mentioned in the title, I can now use cheaper "normal" bulbs instead of reflector ones and get lots of light.The old parts went into curb-side recycling and the new trim and better light make for an easy 15-minute can-light make-over.