In a floor lamp or table lamp a #16 wire is what you need.
You would need a 12 Watt flourescent bulb
To answer this question the amp hour rating of the battery is needed along with the voltage of the battery or bulb.
This depends on how long it is being used. The 60 Watt bulb consumes 2.6667 times the power of an 18 Watt bulb, but energy equals power times time. There is also an amount of 'hidden' energy: the energy to manufacture and transport the bulb. This depends on how long it is being used. The 60 Watt bulb consumes 2.6667 times the power of an 18 Watt bulb, but energy equals power times time. There is also an amount of 'hidden' energy: the energy to manufacture and transport the bulb.
The bulb uses 5 watts of power.
No, it is not alright to replace a 180 watt DLP TV bulb with a 200 watt bulb. You should only use the OEM rated size/wattage for your TV.
You would need a 12 Watt flourescent bulb
To answer this question the amp hour rating of the battery is needed along with the voltage of the battery or bulb.
This depends on how long it is being used. The 60 Watt bulb consumes 2.6667 times the power of an 18 Watt bulb, but energy equals power times time. There is also an amount of 'hidden' energy: the energy to manufacture and transport the bulb. This depends on how long it is being used. The 60 Watt bulb consumes 2.6667 times the power of an 18 Watt bulb, but energy equals power times time. There is also an amount of 'hidden' energy: the energy to manufacture and transport the bulb.
It is probably a 60 watt bulb (believe it or not). Bulbs are rated in watts. A 100 watt bulb is brighter and consumes more power than a 60 watt bulb
The bulb uses 5 watts of power.
No, it is not alright to replace a 180 watt DLP TV bulb with a 200 watt bulb. You should only use the OEM rated size/wattage for your TV.
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.
40 watt light bulb
Mine has a 25 watt 120 volt bulb in it.
power difference
The higher the wattage the more you pay for power. So it costs more to operate a 120 watt bulb than it does a 100 or 40 watt bulb.
It isn't more, it is less if bulbs are of the same type.