Mother-in-Law has LEDs in her kitchen and hallway, 4 fittings that take 3 G9 plastic body 2.8W LEDs each, and it seems that these LEDs are always blowing and at £14 for 4, far from cheap and this year alone I
I have 5 G9 in the kitchen. I found the G9 (replacements) to be very sensitive, the fluorescent lamps already cooked their electronics, most of the LEDs just kills themselfes (corn type bulbs) too. I had a pair where the LEDs fell of the board after removing the failing lamp... Now I have two cheap ones installed, that seem to be reliable, and one Osram type. Two of the fluorescents are still working.
With regard to LED bulbs - cooling is king, and as a rule of thumb in that regard, heavier bulbs are better.
Still, for isolation safety, they tend to pot the electronics (at least for the german market) - "dead weight" indeed! And it allows the supply electronics to get even hotter...
In general, physics has to be observed, the heat has to go from the LED-package to the environment.
A "corn cob" LED-bulb is an excellent example for a design where it is very hard to get the cooling right - best to avoid them in general.
Still, only the most cunning designs (of what I have seen) have the LEDs itself fail - usually the power supply fails before.
Source: I get my colleagues to bring their dead LED bulbs to me (to (seldom) repair and (often) harvest the LED). Repair is most often thwarted by "physically break to open" design.
@Specmaster: I am very surprised to hear of that many broken ones! But the small-packaged 230V ones are the most challenging (as power supply and led share the same puny heat"sink").
Are they not failing fast enough to get new ones via warranty?