Even though I work very hard at keeping my darkroom very clean and dust free, what dust was around seemed always to be on the negative that I was printing. So I bought an old Aristo cold light on ebay and fitted it to my DII, which greatly reduced the need to spot prints. After using the old one long enough to convince myself that I liked printing with cold light I purchased a new Aristo cold light that came with the V54 bulb, and have never looked back. As others have mentioned, the light is pretty bright and made for short exposures. My solution was to add some translucent plastic to my printing filters (I split grade print) which subtraced about a stop of light from the exposures, giving me reasonable times at middle apertures. When I take the printing filters/diffusion material out of the light path to compose or focus, I get full illumination. My exposures are consistent from print to print, and I have not experienced any of the other problems cited by other posters. In short, purchasing a cold light was a good investment for me.