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Comparison Eurolamp LED 30W 6500K E27 vs Eurolamp LED 30W 4000K E27

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Eurolamp LED 30W 6500K E27
Eurolamp LED 30W 4000K E27
Eurolamp LED 30W 6500K E27Eurolamp LED 30W 4000K E27
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TypelEDlED
BaseE27 (regular)E27 (regular)
Bulbmattematte
Voltage230 В230 В
Consumption30 W30 W
General-purpose bulb300 W300 W
Luminous flux (brightness)3300 lm3000 lm
Colour temperature6500 К4000 К
Color rendering index (Ra)8585
Length185 mm185 mm
Diameter100 mm100 mm
Energy classA+A+
Claimed running time35000 h35000 h
Warranty2 years2 years
Added to E-Catalogmarch 2017march 2017

Luminous flux (brightness)

The conditional "amount of light" produced by a light bulb in normal mode. The higher the luminous flux, the brighter the light and the more clearly the illuminated scene will be visible. Note that lumen values are used primarily for special purposes; in everyday life, the estimation of brightness by the analogue of LON is more popular (see above), and here the ratio is as follows:

— 40 W analogue LON corresponds to a brightness of 370 lm;
— 60 W — 550 lm;
— 75 W — 800 lm;
— 100 W — 1200 lm;
— 150 W — 1900 lm;
— 200 W — 2700 lm.

Note that the principle "the more the better" in the case of the brightness of light bulbs is not always applicable. And the point here is not only energy consumption: too bright light is harmful to the eyes, leads to rapid fatigue and psychological discomfort.

Colour temperature

This parameter describes the general coloration of the light of the lamp in "warm" or "cold" tones.

Initially, colour temperature is the temperature (in kelvins) of an object at which it begins to glow in a certain colour. Interestingly, the higher its value, the more “cold” the colour is: for example, the dull red glow of a heated metal corresponds to 800-1000 K, and the bluish-white tint of a fluorescent lamp corresponds to about 6000 K.

The temperatures encountered in modern light bulbs can be described approximately as follows:

2700 – 3000 K — "warm" white light, similar to traditional incandescent lamps;
3000 – 3500 K — "slightly warmer than average";
3500 – 6000 K — neutral white, similar to daylight;
More than 6000 K — cold shades of white.

Note that the colour temperature is not directly related to the quality of colour reproduction provided by the light of a particular lamp — much depends on the features of its design and, accordingly, the spectral colour balance.