It will probably be stated on the packet, but I doubt it will be higher than the standard bulb which is about 1200 lumens.
A 1,000 watt is 15,000 lumens. A 100 watt bulb is 1,500 lumens.
According to SCL Direct website a 28 watt 2D lamp has an initial lumens output of 2050.
From 20,000 to 23,000 lumens depending on the brand.Average figures:Incandescent: 10 lumens per wattHalogen 13 lumens per wattCFL (low-energy) 50 lumens per watt
Depending on the brand, it will give about 18.000 Lumens and equals a 100W HPS lamp
It depends on the specific lamp. The packaging the lamp comes in should tell you what the lumen output is. This in a common question as people want to compare LED replacements. You can use 600 lumen as a good guide for comparison for a 50 Watt halogen.
A 1,000 watt is 15,000 lumens. A 100 watt bulb is 1,500 lumens.
According to SCL Direct website a 28 watt 2D lamp has an initial lumens output of 2050.
From 20,000 to 23,000 lumens depending on the brand.Average figures:Incandescent: 10 lumens per wattHalogen 13 lumens per wattCFL (low-energy) 50 lumens per watt
Depending on the brand, it will give about 18.000 Lumens and equals a 100W HPS lamp
It depends on the specific lamp. The packaging the lamp comes in should tell you what the lumen output is. This in a common question as people want to compare LED replacements. You can use 600 lumen as a good guide for comparison for a 50 Watt halogen.
10-11 lumens per watt for incandescent bulbs 13-14 lumens per watt for halogen 50-60 lumens per watt for fluorescent
Approximately 15 lumens per watt for halogen, so 300 lumens.
The maximum lumens that a 1-watt LED flashlight can have now is 160.
a 42 watt cfl give off 2800 lumens
1800lumens per watt
There is no direct conversion . . . different types of lamp bulbs put out different amounts of light per watt.
around 21,000 average 100 watt bulb is around 1400 lumens. That's 14 lumens per watt. 14X1,500 = 21,000