around 21,000 average 100 watt bulb is around 1400 lumens. That's 14 lumens per watt. 14X1,500 = 21,000
About 2700 lumens from a 150 watt QH flood light.
Halogen lamps run hotter than conventional incandescents, and as a result of their hotter filaments, emit a whiter light with more of the light in the visible range, and less in the infrared. A typical 50W halogen emits between 800 and 950 lumens.
Wikpedia says that halogen lamps produce about 19-20 lumens/watt. If you have a 500W lamp then you get 9500-10000 lumens.
Amps * Volts = Watts Since you know the Watts, determine your voltage to determine the Amps. For example, if you are using 120 volts: Amps * 120 = 30 and from basic algebra Amps = 30/120 Amps = .25
A halogen bulb IS ITSELF a type of incandescent illumination source. A 40 Watt traditional incandescent bulb usually emits about 400 to 500 lumens while a halogen may emit close to twice that. So a 25 W halogen might give out as much light as ah older style 40 W bulb.
Your question answers itself... 1000 watts, when operated on a 480-volt source..
No. 480 lumens is about the output of a 40 watt light bulb, and that will not make a very good flood light.
A 1,000 watt is 15,000 lumens. A 100 watt bulb is 1,500 lumens.
From halogen to LED you can divide by 4 to find the equivalent. Therefore an 80 watt LED would do the job.
It's about 600 lumens. The same brightness comes from a 12 Watt compact fluorescent light (CFL).
A 150-watt light bulb uses energy at the rate of 150 watts, when it's turned on.
161 lumens I believe the above answer to be inaccurate. It depends on the light source. For example: For an incandescent light bulb 1 watt it is approx. 18 Lumens. However most LED's use only about 10% the wattage to produce the same amount of light. So for LED's .1 watt produces 18 Lumens.
Incandescent bulbs give about 10 lumens of light per watt of electric power Halogens give about 13 lumens per watt CFLs give about 50 lumens per watt So it depends on the type of bulb.
A 400 watt Mercury vapor light bulb produces roughly 23,000 lumens. In comparison to a 400 watt metal haloid and or high-pressure sodium, not as good. Metal haliod and high-pressure sodium produces 30,000 lumens.
Approximately 15 lumens per watt for halogen, so 300 lumens.
The main types are: Incandescent 10 lumens per watt Halogen 13 lumens per watt Fluorescent 40-50 lumens per watt LED 40-60 lumens per watt Lumens measures the brightness, watts measures the electric power used.
Depends on the bulbs efficiency. The ones I've gotten in the past few years are between 700-800 lumens. Check the packaging, it should state.
LEDs use the smallest amount of electrical power to produce a given amount of light. Approximate data: Incandescent 12 lumens per watt Halogen: 15-17 lumens per watt CFL: 50 lumens per watt LED: 80 lumens per watt Sodium lights as used in street lighting produce 100-200 lumens per watt.