Salutations everyone,
I took a temp reading on my bulbs...
This is something i've got on my mind for quite a long while because i consider the trade-off ends up being global heat production when using multiple CFL bulbs.
Suppose i target a total output flux of 40000 lumens and those are the solutions available to me:
15.4 x 2600 lm/40 W (65 lm/W)
13.3 x 3000 lm/45 W (66.7 lm/W)
25 x 1600 lm/23 W (69.6 lm/W)
In theory the 23 W model should convert power into light more efficiently than its peers but i'll need 25 of them and hence this would translate to as many ballasts. Now, lets take for granted that all ballast sizes correspond to a comparable power conversion loss of 20 % (e.g. heat) mainly dependent on a same technology, then i guess these are the losses i should expect for each lamp:
40 W x 0.2 = 8 W
45 W x 0.2 = 9 W
23 W x 0.2 = 4.6 W
Finally, taking the number of units into account it would lead to this i presume:
8 W x 15.4 = 123.2 W
9 W x 13.3 = 119.7 W
4.6 W x 25 = 115 W
But it turns out there are no .3 or .4 lamps so the final numbers would become:
8 W x 15 = 120 W (40 W)
9 W x 13 = 117 W (45 W)
4.6 W x 25 = 115 W (23 W)
In your opinion, does my estimation reflect reality and if not where did it go wrong?
Also, there's the necessary wiring that comes with all those bulbs while in comparison a 2 Watts difference seems trivial (23 vs 45 W) relatively to the requirement for a wide-opened window (provided it's cold enough outside, otherwise it certainly calls for an air conditioner as i found out)...
Finally, i'm seeking your thoughts while looking at the structure illustrated below:
Any input would be appreciated.
