It will probably be stated on the packet, but I doubt it will be higher than the standard bulb which is about 1200 lumens.
A 1,000 watt is 15,000 lumens. A 100 watt bulb is 1,500 lumens.
A 26-watt compact fluorescent lamp typically produces around 1,700 lumens.
From 20,000 to 23,000 lumens depending on the brand.Average figures:Incandescent: 10 lumens per wattHalogen 13 lumens per wattCFL (low-energy) 50 lumens per watt
Depending on the brand, it will give about 18.000 Lumens and equals a 100W HPS lamp
According to SCL Direct website a 28 watt 2D lamp has an initial lumens output of 2050.
A 1,000 watt is 15,000 lumens. A 100 watt bulb is 1,500 lumens.
A 26-watt compact fluorescent lamp typically produces around 1,700 lumens.
From 20,000 to 23,000 lumens depending on the brand.Average figures:Incandescent: 10 lumens per wattHalogen 13 lumens per wattCFL (low-energy) 50 lumens per watt
Depending on the brand, it will give about 18.000 Lumens and equals a 100W HPS lamp
According to SCL Direct website a 28 watt 2D lamp has an initial lumens output of 2050.
10-11 lumens per watt for incandescent bulbs 13-14 lumens per watt for halogen 50-60 lumens per watt for fluorescent
Approximately 15 lumens per watt for halogen, so 300 lumens.
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.
1800lumens per watt
A 150 watt bulb typically produces around 2600 to 2800 lumens.
There is no direct conversion . . . different types of lamp bulbs put out different amounts of light per watt.
A 150 watt incandescent bulb typically produces around 2600 lumens.