It depends on the specific lamp. The packaging the lamp comes in should tell you what the lumen output is.
This in a common question as people want to compare LED replacements. You can use 600 lumen as a good guide for comparison for a 50 Watt halogen.
Could be 500 lumens for a incandescent lamp, or 2500 lumens for a fluorescent.
It is about 600 lumens for an ordinary incandescent, or about 780 lumens for a halogen type.
A 1,000 watt is 15,000 lumens. A 100 watt bulb is 1,500 lumens.
A 50 watt incandescent bulb is about 650 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.
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.
Incandescents produce 10 lumens per watt, halogens about 13 lumens per watt, fluorescents and LEDs 40-50 lumens per watt. Lumens measure the brightness, watts measure the speed at which electrical energy is used.
A 1,000 watt is 15,000 lumens. A 100 watt bulb is 1,500 lumens.
A 50 watt incandescent bulb is about 650 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.
Incandescent: 10-12 lumens per watt CFL: 50 lumens per watt.
A 150-watt light bulb uses energy at the rate of 150 watts, when it's turned on.
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.
Incandescents produce 10 lumens per watt, halogens about 13 lumens per watt, fluorescents and LEDs 40-50 lumens per watt. Lumens measure the brightness, watts measure the speed at which electrical energy is used.
Bulb brightness is measured in lumens which express the amount of light produced, while the electric power used is measured in watts. The typical efficiency of some different types of bulb is: Incandescent 12 lumens per watt Halogen 17 lumens per watt CFL (compact fluorescent) 50-60 lumens/watt LED (light-emitting diodes) 90-100 lumens/watt.
Approximately 15 lumens per watt for halogen, so 300 lumens.
10-11 lumens per watt for incandescent bulbs 13-14 lumens per watt for halogen 50-60 lumens per watt for fluorescent
Incandescent: 10-12 lumens per wattHalogen: 15 lumens per wattCFL: 50 lumens per wattLEDS: 50-60 lumens per watt in bulbs you can buy in a store, but some manufacturers have claimed more than twice that. sheerled.co.uk/
Incandescent produces about 10 lumens of light per watt of electricity Halogen produces about 13 lumens per watt Fluorescent and CFL produce about 50 lumens per watt So Fluorescent is the most efficient.