Lumen and candlepower are not the same thing. Lumen measure the of light surrounds, like you would light a room with a lamp. Candlepower measures the light in a beam, like a flashlight beam. With a few assumptions you can convert lumen to candlepower. With these assumptions 360 lumen would be 28.6 candlepower.
Some light bulbs are oval shaped so that the light will spread out 360 degrees and go to most places, except under the bottom of the light bulb where it attaches to the lamp.
there are 60 seconds in a minute therefore you divide 360 by 60 and get 6w. 360/60=6 6w is the answer.
Power = Energy/time 100W=Energy/360 Seconds Energy = 100/360 Energy ≈ 0.27 Joules
3 bulb can be connected..............................
A halogen bulb works equally well with AC or DC.
A lumen is a measure of how much total light a bulb produces. Incandescent (1156) bulbs spray their light through almost 360 degrees and lamp housings designed for them rely on that. Most LED lamps put all their light out in a narrow cone and work poorly with standard 1156 housings. However, there are LED assemblies that have their light-producing chips arranged around a sphere and they work well in standard housings. The LEDs you see on commercial vehicles are mounted in housings designed for their narrow cone output, that's why they look bright. A standard 1156 bulb puts out about 400 lumens when new. As of January 2010, I haven't found an LED replacement that puts out any more, and most are only 50 lumens or so, not enough for a standard 1156 housing. To confirm the above: From Bosch Automotive Handbook7th ed. a 1156 (BA15S) Stop/Turn 21W bulb puts out 460 lumens. For a 5W Side marker / Tail BA15S it is 50 lumens (strangely low, I know) and 10W Tail light 125 lumens. If replacing with a warm white LED, then that is how many lumens you need to match the brightness (as well as light direction being good). BUT, if using a Red LED for a brake light or an Amber LED for Turn signals, then less lumens are needed. This is because the Red lens of a brake light filters out all the blue, yellow, green, etc out of white light, but filters nothing from a Red LED. The question now is: What is the percentage of "Red" in the light output of a "White" incandescent bulb?
This technology is young, and several manufacturers are coming out with new models each year. Prices have ranged from approximately $360 to $500. Design breakthroughs, however, may reduce this price in the future.
Eternal Light - video game - happened in 360.
Incandescent bulbs: 10 lumens per watt Halogens: 13 lumens per watt CFLs: 50 lumens per watt A useful bulb to light a small room is 600 lumens, so that would need a 60-watt incandescent, or a 45-watt halogen, or a 12-watt CFL energy-saving bulb. The best CFL bulbs are the spiral ones.
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