Structures were carried out on the degradation of heterojunction and homojunction a-Si:H solar cells, using Xenon arc and tungsten halogen light sources. The degradations were carried out with both white and red light with the intensities being calibrated using the saturated reverse biased photocurrents. Because of the different light intensities, I, involved, comparisons between the different illumination were made after exposure times, t, where I1.8t = constant. The degraded states of the cells were characterized with light I-V, dark I-V, and quantum efficiency measurements. The same degraded states, as indicated by the all three characteristics, are obtained with either white and red light providing the intensities are calibrated using the actual p-i-n cells. It is also found that the empirical relation for obtaining the same degradation found by L. Yang holds for these illuminations being about 1 and 10 suns. Analysis of the dark I-V's using AMPS with a charged defect distributions of defects indicates that with the exposures used, the light induced defects have a close to uniform distribution throughout the i-layer.