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A light bulb with a power consumption of 150 watts typically produces around 2600 to 3000 lumens.
A 150W incandescent bulb typically produces around 2600 lumens.
A 150 watt bulb typically produces around 2600 to 2800 lumens.
A 100W incandescent light bulb typically produces around 1600 lumens of light.
A 150 watt incandescent bulb typically produces around 2600 lumens.
About 80 lumens per watt of electric power is normal for LEDs.
Depending on the brand, it will give about 18.000 Lumens and equals a 100W HPS lamp
Watts are a unit of power. So 40 watts of power to an LED are the same as 40 watts of power to a fluorescent. Sometimes LEDs are rated in equivalent watts which is an attempt to relate watts to brightness or lumens. You need to compare lumens and the "temperature" of the bulbs in Kelvin to get the comparison I think you are looking for.
A light bulb with a power consumption of 150 watts typically produces around 2600 to 3000 lumens.
it depends, lumens measures light and watts measure power. check out this article; http://wiki.renderplus.com/?title=Lumens_vs_Watts
the NiteRider HID Firestorm produces 500 Lumens its bulb equals that of a 40watt incandesent bulb ,but with a much brighter white color
A LUMEN is a unit of measurement of light. It measures light much the same way. Remember, a foot-candle is how bright the light is one foot away from the source. A lumen is a way of measuring how much light gets to what you want to light! A LUMEN is equal to one foot-candle falling on one square foot of area. So, if we take your candle and ruler, lets place a book at the opposite end from the candle. We'd have a bit of a light up if we put the book right next to the candle, you know. If that book happens to be one foot by one foot, it's one square foot. Ok, got the math done there. Now, all the light falling on that book, one foot away from your candle equals both…….1 foot candle AND one LUMEN
700 lumens
Incandescent bulbs give about 10 lumens of light per watt of electric power Halogens give about 13 lumens per watt CFLs give about 50 lumens per watt So it depends on the type of bulb.
100 lumens=1257 candlepower from what I have found
Approximately 15 lumens per watt for halogen, so 300 lumens.
If you have the wattage of the laser you can plug it into a formula X/P=L. Where One lumen is equal to 0.001496 watts (1.496mW) which is Power. X is the number of watts or milliwatt and L is Lumens. So if you have a 1 watt laser you have 668.449 lumens being produced by it.