That depends on so much more then just the watt of the bulb, but if you have two identical bulbs where the only difference is the amount of watt, then logic dictates that 25watt is brighter then 10watt
The heat dissipation is what the fixture is rated for. They are saying maximum heat of 25 watts so 40 watts is going to be too much.
It meas that the bulb uses 25 watts of electric power to run. Different types of bulb produce different amounts of light, with incandescent bulbs producing the least. A bigger proportion of the energy supplied to the compact fluorescent bulb is transferred to light and less wasted to the surroundings as heating.
As 1 Watt equals to 1000 milli Watts so 25 milliwatts = 25/1000 = 0.025 Watts.
The wattage of a lamp is normally written on it. If you need to work it out you can measure the voltage across the lamp then measure the current passing through it. Multiplying the voltage by the number of amps will give you the wattage.
NO! THIS IS DANGEROUS The largest warmer uses a maximum capacity wattage bulbs of 25 watts. The mid-size 20-watts and the plug ins; 15 watts. You are risking the chance of fire or burns if you use a higher wattage bulb than 25, 20 or 15 watt bulb in their perspective warmer! If you have a problem with getting bulbs, I can remedy that solution forever. Please visit https://carandhome.scentsy.us/Scentsy/Home and any warmer you purchase, I will give you (correct sized) FREE BULBS for LIFE! Thanks.
It depends on the type of bulb. Incandescent bulbs convert about 90% of the energy into heat and and only 10% is put off as light. LEDs, for instance, are much more efficient, converting almost 90% of the input energy to light. So, a 5 watt LED will convert about 4.5 watts to light, while a 25 watt incandescent will only convert 2.5 watts into light.
25 watts?
because it has more watts
Because it takes more current and power and produces more light power. Running a 100 w lamp costs 4 times more than a 25 w lamp.
The heat dissipation is what the fixture is rated for. They are saying maximum heat of 25 watts so 40 watts is going to be too much.
Because the filament of a 25-W lamp has a higher resistance than that of a 60-W lamp and, therefore, will experience a greater voltage drop -the lamp with the voltage drop closer to its rated voltage (in this case, the 25-W lamp) will be the brighter.
It meas that the bulb uses 25 watts of electric power to run. Different types of bulb produce different amounts of light, with incandescent bulbs producing the least. A bigger proportion of the energy supplied to the compact fluorescent bulb is transferred to light and less wasted to the surroundings as heating.
As 1 Watt equals to 1000 milli Watts so 25 milliwatts = 25/1000 = 0.025 Watts.
The wattage of a lamp is normally written on it. If you need to work it out you can measure the voltage across the lamp then measure the current passing through it. Multiplying the voltage by the number of amps will give you the wattage.
NO! THIS IS DANGEROUS The largest warmer uses a maximum capacity wattage bulbs of 25 watts. The mid-size 20-watts and the plug ins; 15 watts. You are risking the chance of fire or burns if you use a higher wattage bulb than 25, 20 or 15 watt bulb in their perspective warmer! If you have a problem with getting bulbs, I can remedy that solution forever. Please visit https://carandhome.scentsy.us/Scentsy/Home and any warmer you purchase, I will give you (correct sized) FREE BULBS for LIFE! Thanks.
Probably, as the CFL consumption is 26 watts. Why not try a 60 watt CFL first, that would be much lower consumption.
bad question.25 watts of light?25 watts of music?What kind of plants?What kind of light source?more information needed.