Lighting
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7blackdog7
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Lighting

by 7blackdog7 » Mon Nov 08, 2010 4:38 pm

Hi,
I have to change my kitchen ceiling light. This is a triple spot, adjustable and each bulb is 100w. I have experienced halogen lighting in th past and I know 3x50w G10's will not give sufficient light.
Is there any way to compare the light values of normal 100w bulbs with modern halogens?
Thanks.[size=18][/size]

ericmark
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Location: Llanfair Caereinion, Mid Wales.

by ericmark » Mon Nov 08, 2010 7:01 pm

With a correctly designed system a living room needs around 100W of light but use small lamps which produce more heat than light the same room will need 500W of lighting to get same results.

Most of the problem is lamps that are physically too small. A 60W florescent tube will light a room far better than a 60W spot lamp. A spot lamp is as the name suggests designed to light just one small area like a picture on the wall.

Even the 60W florescent has many flavours with some tubes having coatings to send more light down and less up to ceiling and by using HF running gear they use less power than the inductance controlled models.

Room height also has a profound effect when we changed a workshop with a low ceiling lights from florescent to 70W Metal Halide it was a failure but same job with 15 foot ceiling was great.

Also room colour will effect the result. As you can see rather involved so no simple answer.

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