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Halogen gas is in a Tungsten-Halogen Light Bulb.
Halogen lamps should not be dimmed. At lower voltages the halide is not hot enough and will condense on the glass bulb, darkening it. You will be replacing bulbs all the time.
Yes, the halogen bulb would provide about 30% more brightness (lumens) for the same electric power rating. So 70 watt halogen is about equal to 90-100 watt incandescent.
yes you can
Yes. It just won't be as bright.
Yes, the two voltages are in the same range category.
It is a double ended halogen bulb and I do not know how to get to it to release it from the lamp.
It would be pretty much undefined, since the filament of the halogen bulb would fail immediately then there would be an open circuit with no current draw. <<>> The formula for current is Amps = Watts/Volts. The lamp itself would draw 4.16 amps. Since the voltage of the lamp is 12 volts there is a internal transformer involved in the fixture itself. It doesn't matter what the input (primary) voltage to the transformer is, so long as it meets the manufacturer's specification as to the proper voltage to operate the fixture.
Halogen is a gas, so your question doesn't make much sense. If you're asking about a halogen (light) bulb, then the answer is: mainly halogen.
Halogen H4 55 Watts bulb.
It's a halogen bulb
A halogen bulb IS ITSELF a type of incandescent illumination source. A 40 Watt traditional incandescent bulb usually emits about 400 to 500 lumens while a halogen may emit close to twice that. So a 25 W halogen might give out as much light as ah older style 40 W bulb.