A light-meter reading is less useful than a lumen value because the distance must be known to compare readings.
Some Philips Data:
Item Ordering Wattage Base Voltage Rated Lumens CBCP Beam Power
Number Abbreviation (W) Type (VAC) Life (hrs.)1 (lm)2 CCT3 (cd) Angle R9 CRI4 Factor
78741 LED21PAR38/GU24/DIM/P/930/FL30 21 GU24 120 25,000 1150 3000K 3700 30° 62 95 0.7
My table-top lamps:
Model No. S8816:
Photometric Measurements at 25°C – Integrating Sphere Method
Sample No., CCT, CRI, CIE 31' (x), CIE 31’ (y), CIE 76’ (u’), CIE 76’ (v’).
S6129L 5143 87..6 0.341 0.343 0.212 0.480
S6130L 5125 87.15 0.341 0.344 0.212 0.480
S6131L 5131 87.28 0.341 0.343 0.212 0.480
Average 5133 87.22 0.341 0.343 0.212 0.480
Sample No., Base Orientation, Input Voltage (Vac), Input Current (mA), Input Power (Watts), Input Power Factor, Absolute Luminous Flux (Lumens), Lumen Efficacy (Lumens Per Watt).
S6129L UP 120.0 126.4 14.47 0.953 726.3 50.19
S6130L UP 120.0 127.2 14.58 0.954 760.5 52.16
S6131L UP 120.0 126.0 14.44 0.955 714.1 49.45
Average UP 120.0 126.5 14.50 0.954 733.6 50.60
We should note that LED lamps are much more efficient than incandescent lamps, so simply quoting lamp power consumption is meaningless for the purposes of comparison. For example, 500W of LED power would get you a whopping 25,300 lumens for my model S8816 (but you'd need 34 of them at 60 bucks a pop ;-). As opposed to approx 8000 lm from a halogen lamp.... for the photo I was using nothing less than FOUR 500W Tungsten work lights for a total of two THOUSAND watts. So I'm sure you can imagine how well that lights up an average room. Would LED lights be any brighter than this?
Disclaimer: Not that I would use LED lamps for portraiture - or landscape work for that matter ;-).