Want this question answered?
This varies widely between manufacturers, whether it's a "clear" bulb or a "frosted" bulb, and what type bulb as in incandescent, florescent , quartz, etc etc
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 1,000 watt is 15,000 lumens. A 100 watt bulb is 1,500 lumens.
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.
A 150 watt halogen bulb will give off somewhere around 2000 lumens. These lights may give off up to about 2400 lumens.
1500
The number of lumens produced by a 34 watt bulb depends on the type of bulb. As a general estimation, a standard incandescent bulb produces around 400-500 lumens per 40 watts, so a 34 watt bulb would likely produce slightly fewer lumens, around 350-450 lumens. However, different bulb technologies such as LED or CFL can produce a higher number of lumens with lower wattage.
25
It's about 600 lumens. The same brightness comes from a 12 Watt compact fluorescent light (CFL).
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.
This depends on the type of bulb and it's efficiency. Incandescent bulbs produce 700-900 lumens at 60 watts.
About 50-60, which is 4-5 times better than incandescent bulbs.