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-   -   Incandescent bulbs - Lumen output ? (https://www.diybanter.com/uk-diy/3073-incandescent-bulbs-lumen-output.html)

froggers October 28th 03 03:51 PM

Incandescent bulbs - Lumen output ?
 
Can anyone tell me what the typical lumen outputs of "normal" mains
40W / 60W / 100W bulbs are or a website ?
Also what the typical light output reduction is with age of the bulbs ?

Be interesting to know how the CFL outputs compare and how different
manufacturers products compare (e.g. Mazda / Osram etc )

Thanks,

Nick



Owain October 28th 03 05:20 PM

Incandescent bulbs - Lumen output ?
 
"froggers" wrote
| Can anyone tell me what the typical lumen outputs of "normal" mains
| 40W / 60W / 100W bulbs are or a website ?

Referring to my "Mechanical World" Electrical Year Book the output of a lamp
in lumens will be given by 4 pi Mean Spherical Candle Power. About one-half
of one percent of the enegry input to a carbon filament lamp is radiated as
light, compared to about one and a half percent in a vacuum-type tungsten
filament lamp and about 3 percent in a large gas-filled tungsten lamp. The
efficiency rises as the size increases and the efficiency drops as the
voltage increases.

For Pendant Position Vertical, tungsten filament standard lamps not opals
(Table III)

Watts Avg Lumens per Watt
15 6.70
25 7.20
40 7.13
60 8.73
75 9.54
100 10.43
150 11.52
200 11.97
300 12.78
500 13.86
1000 15.65
1500 16.73

Table IV Typical lamp efficiencies

Lamp / Lumens per W / W per MSCP

Carbon fil, ordinary 3.0 4.2
Carbon fil, metallised 6.0 2.1
Nernst 8.5 1.5
Tantalum 8.0 1.5
Tungsten, vacuum 7.5-9.5 1.65-1.3
Tungsten, gasfilled 10-20 1.25-0.65
Open carbon arc DC 15 0.85
Open carbon arc AC 7 1.8
Enclosed carbon arc DC 9.5 1.3
Flame arc open DC 40 0.32
Magnetite arc 25 0.5
Tungsten arc 12.5 1.0
Mercury arc (in quartz) 55 0.23
Neon arc 25 035
Moore, N/CO2 8.5 1.5
ditto 3 4.2
Neon glow discharge 0.85 15

| Also what the typical light output reduction is with age of the bulbs ?

For Table III, output remains within 90% of original output within 1000 hour
rated life.

Owain


Andrew Gabriel October 29th 03 12:16 AM

Incandescent bulbs - Lumen output ?
 
In article ,
"Owain" writes:
"froggers" wrote
| Can anyone tell me what the typical lumen outputs of "normal" mains
| 40W / 60W / 100W bulbs are or a website ?

Referring to my "Mechanical World" Electrical Year Book the output of a lamp


What year is this? Looks like 1920's from the lamps listed...

Table IV Typical lamp efficiencies

Lamp / Lumens per W / W per MSCP

Carbon fil, ordinary 3.0 4.2
Carbon fil, metallised 6.0 2.1
Nernst 8.5 1.5
Tantalum 8.0 1.5
Tungsten, vacuum 7.5-9.5 1.65-1.3
Tungsten, gasfilled 10-20 1.25-0.65
Open carbon arc DC 15 0.85
Open carbon arc AC 7 1.8
Enclosed carbon arc DC 9.5 1.3
Flame arc open DC 40 0.32
Magnetite arc 25 0.5
Tungsten arc 12.5 1.0
Mercury arc (in quartz) 55 0.23
Neon arc 25 035
Moore, N/CO2 8.5 1.5
ditto 3 4.2
Neon glow discharge 0.85 15


Low pressure sodium -- 180 Lumens per Watt for the larger lamps

--
Andrew Gabriel

Owain October 29th 03 03:57 PM

Incandescent bulbs - Lumen output ?
 
"Andrew Gabriel" wrote
| "Owain" writes:
| Referring to my "Mechanical World" Electrical Year Book the output of a
lamp
| What year is this? Looks like 1920's from the lamps listed...

1934. The 'definitions and units' section includes a helpful comment that:
the standard of comparison used to-day is the International Candle (or
Bougie Decimale). A most useful little volume, although some of the circuits
remain impractical until Buy & Queue start selling Lundberg Twinob switches
:-)

Owain



Abdullah Eyles October 30th 03 12:11 PM

Incandescent bulbs - Lumen output ?
 
"froggers" wrote in message ...
Can anyone tell me what the typical lumen outputs of "normal" mains
40W / 60W / 100W bulbs are or a website ?
Also what the typical light output reduction is with age of the bulbs ?

Be interesting to know how the CFL outputs compare and how different
manufacturers products compare (e.g. Mazda / Osram etc )

Thanks,

Nick


There is a very useful table at
http://www.nofs.navy.mil/about_NOFS/.../lumentab.html, which
includes CFL (I assume you mean Compact Fluorescent?) The colour bands
represent the light output as referred to the visible spectrum.

The "normal" bulbs are near the bottom listed as "Incandescent
(standard)"

Didn't as yet find manufacturers comparison tables...

Andrew Gabriel October 30th 03 01:07 PM

Incandescent bulbs - Lumen output ?
 
In article ,
(Abdullah Eyles) writes:

There is a very useful table at
http://www.nofs.navy.mil/about_NOFS/.../lumentab.html, which
includes CFL (I assume you mean Compact Fluorescent?) The colour bands
represent the light output as referred to the visible spectrum.

The "normal" bulbs are near the bottom listed as "Incandescent
(standard)"


Bare in mind, 120V US filament lamps are more efficient than 240V
UK filament lamps, which will make the Incandescent and Tungsten
Halogen tables wrong for UK comparisons.

Also, in the fluorescent lamps sections, US T8 runs at a different
current from rest of the world which will affect the results, and
T12 High-Output doesn't exist outside the US AFAIK. US regular T12
and T8 have higher control gear losses on magnetic ballasts than
220-240V countries, although the table ignores control gear losses.

--
Andrew Gabriel

Abdullah Eyles October 31st 03 08:42 AM

Incandescent bulbs - Lumen output ?
 

Bare in mind, 120V US filament lamps are more efficient than 240V
UK filament lamps, which will make the Incandescent and Tungsten
Halogen tables wrong for UK comparisons.

Also, in the fluorescent lamps sections, US T8 runs at a different
current from rest of the world which will affect the results, and
T12 High-Output doesn't exist outside the US AFAIK. US regular T12
and T8 have higher control gear losses on magnetic ballasts than
220-240V countries, although the table ignores control gear losses.


And I was so pleased with myself... :(:(:( back to the drawing board...

Ben November 1st 03 07:42 PM

Incandescent bulbs - Lumen output ?
 
Abdullah Eyles wrote:
Bare in mind, 120V US filament lamps are more efficient than 240V
UK filament lamps, which will make the Incandescent and Tungsten
Halogen tables wrong for UK comparisons.

Also, in the fluorescent lamps sections, US T8 runs at a different
current from rest of the world which will affect the results, and
T12 High-Output doesn't exist outside the US AFAIK. US regular T12
and T8 have higher control gear losses on magnetic ballasts than
220-240V countries, although the table ignores control gear losses.



And I was so pleased with myself... :(:(:( back to the drawing board...


Assuming that this comparison is valid for the UK, its interesting to
note that fluorescent, metal halide, and high pressure sodium all have
similar efficiency which is only half that of nasty yellow low pressure
sodium. The council have just replaced all LPS streetlights near us with
HPS ones that appear a lot brighter, although the light seems to be
focused where its needed much more effectively than the old ones so
perhaps they get by using the same power.



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