Generally speaking, the lumen per one watt of different LED is different. As far as i known, some LED products can reach 120 lumen per watt or more higher which from lab or some big famous comapny, we called this is lab level, but in fact, most of companies and LED manufactures can not reach this level, theirs LED products are differenet, some of they can reach 80~90 lumen per watt, but some is very low, like companies power, technical level, product develop and many others factor will effect the lumen level. Of course, all of this conclusion is base on the test report of LED product, like lumen, color temperature, CRI, illuminances etc parameters.
This depends on the type of bulb and it's efficiency. Incandescent bulbs produce 700-900 lumens at 60 watts.
A 23 watt cfl will give off roughly 1600 lumens. However that is only within a few inches of the bulb.
lumenicity (how much light something gives off) is not directly related to power. A 60 watt LED will give off more light than a 60 watt incandescent. You should check the manufacturers information. Light.com (first one to show up in my google search) specifies a 500 lumen 8 watt LED. the 52W incandescent "soft white" bulbs I have on many dimmers in my home put of 710 lumens as a comparison.
2300lm Comment I think you mean lumens, not lumen's. No that answer is wrong Watts (energy usage) / Lumens (light output) 25 is equal to 200 35 is equal to 325 40 is equal to 450 60 is equal to 800 75 is equal to 1100 100 is equal to 1600 125 is equal to 2000 150 is equal to 2600 36 watts would be about 350 Lumens
The output of bulbs varies. A typical output of a 60W incandescent bulb is 680 lumens.
A 150 watt incandescent bulb typically produces around 2600 lumens.
A 150-watt light bulb typically produces around 2600-2800 lumens.
A 60 watt G9 Xenon bulb typically produces around 700-900 lumens.
A 1,000 watt is 15,000 lumens. A 100 watt bulb is 1,500 lumens.
A typical sodium vapor bulb can produce around 100 lumens per watt of power consumed. So, if the bulb is, for example, 150 watts, it can produce around 15,000 lumens per hour.
A 150 watt bulb typically produces around 2600 to 2800 lumens.
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.
Approximately 15 lumens per watt for halogen, so 300 lumens.
A 150 watt incandescent bulb typically produces around 2600 lumens.
A 150 watt halogen bulb will give off somewhere around 2000 lumens. These lights may give off up to about 2400 lumens.
This depends on the type of bulb and it's efficiency. Incandescent bulbs produce 700-900 lumens at 60 watts.
The amount of light (Lumens) delivered by a light bulb cannot be determined by it's wattage. Bulbs of any wattage by different manufacturers can have different output (lumens). Everything else being the same, a 34 watt 110volt bulb will put out about half the light than a 34 watt 220 volt bulb, and a 12 volt one will put out about 10% of the light as the 120 volt one will.