LED bulbs com in different powers, so there's no way to tell. At a guess a 10W LED might compare to a 60W incandescent.
fluorescents are about 5x as efficientso a 12W will give about as much light
A 13 watt cfl is the same as a 60 watt incandescent. So find an led bulb that is equivelant to a 60 watt incandescent
You would need a 12 Watt flourescent bulb
no because it would blow up because the socket would draw 13 watt not 9 watt
55-watt
fluorescents are about 5x as efficientso a 12W will give about as much light
A 13 watt cfl is the same as a 60 watt incandescent. So find an led bulb that is equivelant to a 60 watt incandescent
So to replace a traditional 60-watt bulb, buy a 15-watt CFL: 60-watt incandescent / 4 = 15 watts. Note: Some brands of 60-watt equivalent CFLs still do not seem to give off as much light as a 60watt incandescent bulb.
You would need a 12 Watt flourescent bulb
no because it would blow up because the socket would draw 13 watt not 9 watt
55-watt
It is equivalent to a 75 watt incandescent bulb
A 15-watt fluorescent should produce about as much light as a 75-watt incandescent.
Yes, if the bulb is incandescent, and you change from a higher wattage bulb to a 25 watt bulb the future growth will be smaller.
As long as the lamp holder will take the larger wattage lamp and the current of the circuit is sized to take the larger current then yes, the lamps should be interchangeable.
Yes
No, a higher wattage INCANDESCENT light bulb uses more current than a lower wattage INCANDESCENT light bulb. Some CF and LED bulbs are rated by the amount of light that an incandescent bulb would produce, but they are also rated by the wattage that they use.