A lamp designed for 120 v takes 5 amps, one intended for 240 v takes 2½ amps.
Voltage x current gives the watts.
Depending on the brand, it will give about 18.000 Lumens and equals a 100W HPS lamp
A 250W HPS (High-Pressure Sodium) bulb uses 250 Watts of electricity when it is operating at its full power. It is important to note that the actual power consumption may vary slightly due to factors such as ballast efficiency and voltage fluctuations.
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A 1,000 watt is 15,000 lumens. A 100 watt bulb is 1,500 lumens.
A 1141 bulb typically produces around 185 lumens.
No!
yes
100 Volts
Depending on the brand, it will give about 18.000 Lumens and equals a 100W HPS lamp
A 250-watt HPS (High Pressure Sodium) bulb typically produces around 28,000 lumens at the initial phase of operation. However, this can decrease over time as the bulb ages.
A 250W HPS (High-Pressure Sodium) bulb uses 250 Watts of electricity when it is operating at its full power. It is important to note that the actual power consumption may vary slightly due to factors such as ballast efficiency and voltage fluctuations.
No, the ballast has to be matched to the lamp. 250 watt ballast, 250 watt lamp. Also be sure to match the lamp type to the proper ballast even though the wattage is the same. HPS ballast to HPS lamp, Metal halide ballast to metal halide lamp and mercury vapour lamp to mercury vapour ballast.
The power consumption of an basic model of LCD projector is around 250W to 400W depending on the make and model, brightness 2000 to 3000 ansi lumens SVGA projector.
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700 lumens
100 lumens=1257 candlepower from what I have found
Approximately 15 lumens per watt for halogen, so 300 lumens.