700 lumens
If the machine or car or truck manual says to use 75w-140, then you MUST use 75w-140. 75w-90 would be far too thin to protect the moving, meshing parts from wear and early failure.
The amount of light (Lumens) delivered by a light bulb cannot be determined by it's wattage. Bulbs of any wattage by different manufacturers can have different output (lumens). Everything else being the same, a 34 watt 110volt bulb will put out about half the light than a 34 watt 220 volt bulb, and a 12 volt one will put out about 10% of the light as the 120 volt one will.
No. The bulb has a maximum rating of 35Watts. If you put 75Watts to a bulb that can only withstand half of that capacity, the bulb will fail.
There is no direct conversion . . . different types of lamp bulbs put out different amounts of light per watt.
75w 90 if you have a manual transmission.... 2.8 quarts.
The amount of power they consume is measured in watts. The amount of light they put out is measured in lumens.
Power = Voltage x Current, so Current = Power / Voltage. {1 amp = (1 watt)/(1volt)}. At 120 Volts, then Current = (13 watts)/(120 volts) = 0.10833 amps.But at 12 volts, (13 watts)/(12 volts)= 1.0833 amps.
75W-90 GL-4. Redline MT-90 is the best but, you can use whatever you want
The best oil for a Mercedes Lorry 818 is Mobil Delvac Synthetic Gear Oil 75W-90. Is that for the engine ?
lumenicity (how much light something gives off) is not directly related to power. A 60 watt LED will give off more light than a 60 watt incandescent. You should check the manufacturers information. Light.com (first one to show up in my google search) specifies a 500 lumen 8 watt LED. the 52W incandescent "soft white" bulbs I have on many dimmers in my home put of 710 lumens as a comparison.
yes you can i have done it the light out put is 5500 lumens all you have to do is keep it a foot a way form the plant. good luck
UK recommendation for the 626 range is 2.7 Ltr grade 75W/90 hope this helps a little Mike 2