Approximately 15 lumens per watt for halogen, so 300 lumens.
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About 80 lumens per watt of electric power is normal for LEDs.
About 300.
It's about 600 lumens. The same brightness comes from a 12 Watt compact fluorescent light (CFL).
The main types are: Incandescent 10 lumens per watt Halogen 13 lumens per watt Fluorescent 40-50 lumens per watt LED 40-60 lumens per watt Lumens measures the brightness, watts measures the electric power used.
Trick question! Depends how far away you are from the light , or how far the light is away from the canopy/ coral, of course the closer you are to the light, the more lumens it will produce.
9000- 11000
100 W tungsten incandescent (220 V): 1380 lm
lumens
Normally the watts is a measure of how many watts of electicity a bulb uses, so a 60 watt bulb uses 60 watts. The brightness is measured in lumens, so a 60-watt incandescent blub might produce 600 lumens while a high-efficiency fluorescent blub might produce 3000 lumens.
Lumens measures how bright it is, watts measures how much electric power it uses up.An old-type incandescent bulb produces about 10 lumens per watt.A halogen produce about 13 lumens per watt.A fluorescent (energy saving) bulb produces about 50 lumens per watt.LEDs produce somewhere around the same as a fluorescent.Read more: Is_a_35_lumens_bulb_as_bright_as_a_60_watts_bulb