During my journey to wherever in the hell it is I am going, I have exchanged the lighting around my house. However, I have found that not all bulb specs are comparable or to a set standard.
When someone recommends using a "100w" LED bulb in exterior light fixtures, what criteria do you use to select your bulb?
I ask because I replaced my driveway coach light bulbs with typical 5000K 15W 100W 1500 Lumen bulbs. I then replaced the light fixtures but did not like the look with the typical bulbs. I replaced those bulbs with Edison Style 5000K 10W 100W 1100 Lumen bulbs. To the eye the output looks similar but from the camera you can see a slight difference with the amount of light on the ground (not enough for me to be angry about).
Yet, there were other options for 100W Edison bulbs with 8W 1400 Lumens. It does not seem there is any consistency with what it takes to be 100W "equivalent."
I have seen to x10 the LED bulb wattage to get the equivalent incandescent wattage, but that doesn't check out with the above. I have seen data that says a 100W bulb should have a certain Lumen output (1500-1600), but, again, that doesn't check out with the above.
Why does LED wattage math seem to be on par with toilet paper math?
When someone recommends using a "100w" LED bulb in exterior light fixtures, what criteria do you use to select your bulb?
- Equivalent to claim?
- Claimed Lumens?
- Rated LED wattage?
- Something else?
I ask because I replaced my driveway coach light bulbs with typical 5000K 15W 100W 1500 Lumen bulbs. I then replaced the light fixtures but did not like the look with the typical bulbs. I replaced those bulbs with Edison Style 5000K 10W 100W 1100 Lumen bulbs. To the eye the output looks similar but from the camera you can see a slight difference with the amount of light on the ground (not enough for me to be angry about).
Yet, there were other options for 100W Edison bulbs with 8W 1400 Lumens. It does not seem there is any consistency with what it takes to be 100W "equivalent."
I have seen to x10 the LED bulb wattage to get the equivalent incandescent wattage, but that doesn't check out with the above. I have seen data that says a 100W bulb should have a certain Lumen output (1500-1600), but, again, that doesn't check out with the above.
Why does LED wattage math seem to be on par with toilet paper math?