If the exit fixture uses a LED lamp it will have a 1 to 3 watt rating. If it is a incandescent bulb, each lamp will draw about 25 watts each.
Yes, that is what the numbers mean.
If the socket threads of the lamp are the same then yes the bulbs can be interchanged. The 5 watt bulb will glow brighter than the 4 watt bulb. If by a 4 watt light you mean a 4 watt fixture, then it is not recommended to place a larger wattage lamp in a fixture that is rated by the manufacturer at a specific operating wattage
The amps drawn by a 65 watt light bulb should be 65/120 or 0.54167. This fraction of an ampere may be restated as 541.67 milli-amps.
2300 watt-hours for every hour it operates. Watts x Hours = watt hours.
Those numbers describe the power used by the two bulbs, in other words how many joules of electrical energy they use per second. The 100 watt bulb uses 40 watts more.
we can use 12 no's
About 1/2 amp.
In general Tube Light consumes 0.2 amps in general by 40 Watts.
+- 250 watt to 500 watt
A reptile light is used to generate heat for the reptile, so you must use a bulb that uses 100 watts, and an incandescent bulb is what you need.
If you dont mind splodey light bulb.
yes my honda phantom has 12v 55 watt headlight
Depend on watt and voltage use of light bulbs. You can use this ohm's law formular to calculate the current draw on light bulbs. I (current in amp) = P (watt)/ E (voltage) If 25W light bulb use in 115V AC (resident home) then current draw will be: 25/115 = 0.22A or 22 miliamperes. Hope this help.
Your question is rather like asking, 'How many miles per hour do you do in one hour?' A watt is simply the rate at which you use energy or do work, and it is the same regardless of over what period it is measured.
Yes, that is what the numbers mean.
Light fittings should not be overloaded electrically because overheating can cause a fire. Alternatively you could use a 20 watt low-energy bulb.
A lot