A 1,000 watt is 15,000 lumens. A 100 watt bulb is 1,500 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.
It is equivalent to a 75 watt incandescent bulb
A 32-watt fluorescent bulb, when used for 1 hour, will consume 0.032 kWh (32 watts ÷ 1000). The energy consumption can be calculated by multiplying the wattage by the number of hours used.
It would depend on the wattage of the fluorescent tubes. As a rough estimate, you would need about 6-8 standard 40-watt fluorescent tubes to approximate the light output of a 1000-watt metal halide bulb.
A 1,000 watt is 15,000 lumens. A 100 watt bulb is 1,500 lumens.
It is equivalent to a 75 watt incandescent bulb
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.
A 32-watt fluorescent bulb, when used for 1 hour, will consume 0.032 kWh (32 watts ÷ 1000). The energy consumption can be calculated by multiplying the wattage by the number of hours used.
0.04 kilowatts one kilowatt is 1000 watts
It would depend on the wattage of the fluorescent tubes. As a rough estimate, you would need about 6-8 standard 40-watt fluorescent tubes to approximate the light output of a 1000-watt metal halide bulb.
Power(Watts) = I (Amps) x E(Voltage) PIE rule. so 1000 = I x 240. 1000/240 = 4.16667 amps.
No. A 70 Watt metal halide bulb can not be replaced with a 150 Watt halide bulb.
1000 kilowatts for 1 mega watt
An incandescent nightlight bulb is either 4 watt or 7 watt. A 4 watt bulb uses 1/25th (0.04) the power of a 100 watt bulb. A 7 watt bulb uses 7/100th (0.07) the power of a 100 watt bulb. There are LED and other types of nightlights that use much less power than this. To find the energy total used multiply the power (in watts) by the total time the light is on (in hours) to get energy (in Wh). If you want kWh divide this by 1000 as a watt is 1/1000th of a kW.
A 40-watt bulb refers to the power consumption or energy usage of the bulb. It indicates the amount of electricity the bulb consumes when it is turned on. In general, the higher the wattage, the brighter the light emitted by the bulb.
james watt