What kind of LED lights take a "driver" ?? The ones I have in my house, and really have ever seen, are all self contained and just need 110VAC power either direct or through a switch to one prong and common to the other. I have two different brands bought a few years apart and both are the same. I bought enough tubes through a place called UltraBriteLEDs or something like that on the internet, to replace every 48" fluorescent light in my house, and their warehouse/facility was right on my way home from work. What a difference in light and the electric bill!! As the old tubes started to fail, I just gutted the original fixtures of any ballast and un-necessary wiring and wired the new LED units in direct. I love the instant on, bright light, no matter what the temperature is, and no flickering of any kind. I'm six or eight years into the original 4 or 5 fixtures I reworked and no issues. They are supposed to be good for 50,000 hours!! These type were all I really saw when I was shopping around, and don't recall seeing any that required a starter of any kind. That is one of the things LED lights were supposed to eliminate.
Amazon warehouses and distribution centers are ALL over the St. Louis area. You can find them in just about every warehouse complex in any part of town, especially if they are near the interstates. When those start springing up, the next thing you see if gas stations and convenience stores start popping up near then so the delivery trucks can gas up a couple of times a day. There are some of those Rivian electric trucks at some of the location, and even those clog up the gas stations with the drivers just goofing off I guess. Most of the time I just see them parked all in a row and they are not charging. I would like to know how many delivery trucks are on the road at any given time each day, and those wouldn't include the privately owned vehicles that the independent contractors that deliver for Amazon are driving??
Type at you later,
Dan McEntee