28,500 Lumens (approximately) there will be variance for other factors including manufacture.
about 28,000, i think.
It depends on the type of GU10 lamp - an GU10 LED will have a lower power usage (cheaper to run) but lower Lumen output. For example a 3W GU10 LED lamp in warm white has an output of about 150 Lumens. For a halogen GU10, a 35W bulb will have an output of about 600 Lumens. For more powerful lamps, expect a higher Lumen output. Finally you have an option such as a low energy GU10 such as the Megaman, which for a 7W power value gives an output of 620 Lumens, which exceeds that of the halogen bulb and also has a longer life.
The brightness of an LED bulb is usually measured in lumens. However, the number of lumens produced by a 2.3W LED bulb will vary depending on the specific type and model of the bulb. It is best to check the manufacturer's specifications or packaging for the lumen output of the specific bulb you are referring to.
lumen
This question is ill posed. Lumen is a unit of measure for how much light comes from the lamp Watt is a unit of measure for how much energy is used by the lamp If the question were; "Which is brighter, a 2000 lumen bulb or a 1500 lumen bulb?" then the answer would be: The 2000 lumen bulb. I think the relation ship between lumen and watt is something like: Incandecent bulbs are 15w/lumen Flourecent bulbs use 40w/lumen LED bulbs are 70w/lumen The way to show the watt and lumen relationship is usually lumens (amount of light) per watt (energy consumption). This is like gas in your car (Miles or KM per Gallon or Liter). Incandescent bulbs have a maximum luminosity of 52 lumens/watt. Fluorescent bulbs range from 46 lumens/watt (CFL) to 100 lumens/watt (T5 and T8 tubes) LED bulbs range from 29 lumens/watt (older, low efficiency) to 100+ (XCree) and they are getting better.
A 50 watt incandescent bulb is about 650 lumens.
The output of bulbs varies. A typical output of a 60W incandescent bulb is 680 lumens.
Generally the lumen output of bulbs is proportional to the power used, if the bulbs are operated at their rated voltage.
It depends on the type of GU10 lamp - an GU10 LED will have a lower power usage (cheaper to run) but lower Lumen output. For example a 3W GU10 LED lamp in warm white has an output of about 150 Lumens. For a halogen GU10, a 35W bulb will have an output of about 600 Lumens. For more powerful lamps, expect a higher Lumen output. Finally you have an option such as a low energy GU10 such as the Megaman, which for a 7W power value gives an output of 620 Lumens, which exceeds that of the halogen bulb and also has a longer life.
no
They are most likely a type of metal halide bulb. <<>> The above answer bulb has a bright white light output. If the light output has an orange look about it then the bulb is a high pressure sodium lamp.
A dimmer reduces the voltage to a light so that the current is reduced, which causes the bulb to have a reduced lumen output.
Should be about 850 lumens. The same brightness is produced by a 15 watt CFL.
The brightness of an LED bulb is usually measured in lumens. However, the number of lumens produced by a 2.3W LED bulb will vary depending on the specific type and model of the bulb. It is best to check the manufacturer's specifications or packaging for the lumen output of the specific bulb you are referring to.
No, you can not use a 150 watt high pressure sodium bulb with a 70 watt ballast.
The 400W high pressure Sodium bulb contains a silver lining inside the frame to give better reflection of light. However, no silver is found inside the bulb.
10-11 lumens per watt for incandescent bulbs 13-14 lumens per watt for halogen 50-60 lumens per watt for fluorescent
The energy consumption of a modern Cree XP-G or XM-L based flashlight with 170 lumen output can be as low as 1.4 watts with 120 and more lumen per watt. The light output will be approximately equal to a 20 W tungsten incandescent light bulb or a 10 W halogen light.