If you have the wattage of the laser you can plug it into a formula X/P=L. Where One lumen is equal to 0.001496 watts (1.496mW) which is Power. X is the number of watts or milliwatt and L is Lumens. So if you have a 1 watt laser you have 668.449 lumens being produced by it.
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.
A 150 watt halogen bulb will give off somewhere around 2000 lumens. These lights may give off up to about 2400 lumens.
Lumens measures how bright it is, watts measures how much electric power it uses up. An old-type incandescent bulb produces about 10 lumens per watt. A halogen produce about 13 lumens per watt. A fluorescent (energy saving) bulb produces about 50 lumens per watt. LEDs produce somewhere around the same as a fluorescent.
This is roughly 500 lumens
100 W tungsten incandescent (220 V): 1380 lm
85-200
There is not more brightness for laser torch light. The light brightness is based on unit lumens. Lumens is more, the touch light is more lighter.
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.
A 150 watt halogen bulb will give off somewhere around 2000 lumens. These lights may give off up to about 2400 lumens.
Trick question! Depends how far away you are from the light , or how far the light is away from the canopy/ coral, of course the closer you are to the light, the more lumens it will produce.
Normally the watts is a measure of how many watts of electicity a bulb uses, so a 60 watt bulb uses 60 watts. The brightness is measured in lumens, so a 60-watt incandescent blub might produce 600 lumens while a high-efficiency fluorescent blub might produce 3000 lumens.
Very quickly, less than 1/10 second. Incandescent bulbs produce only about 10 lumens per watt of power, with the halogen type producing abiut 1 lumens/watt. Low-energy bulbs and LEDs produce about 50-60 lumens per watt.
Lumens measures how bright it is, watts measures how much electric power it uses up.An old-type incandescent bulb produces about 10 lumens per watt.A halogen produce about 13 lumens per watt.A fluorescent (energy saving) bulb produces about 50 lumens per watt.LEDs produce somewhere around the same as a fluorescent.Read more: Is_a_35_lumens_bulb_as_bright_as_a_60_watts_bulb
Lumens measures how bright it is, watts measures how much electric power it uses up. An old-type incandescent bulb produces about 10 lumens per watt. A halogen produce about 13 lumens per watt. A fluorescent (energy saving) bulb produces about 50 lumens per watt. LEDs produce somewhere around the same as a fluorescent.
This depends on the type of bulb and it's efficiency. Incandescent bulbs produce 700-900 lumens at 60 watts.
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.
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.