please note the brightness of these, they are the equivalent of a 15w bulb. they are great for color accents but hardly put out any light (get the 2nd generation for that)
That can't be right. 12W & 120 lumen is only 10 lumens per watt. A decent major brand light strip should achieve 120 lumens from a couple watts.
Okay, looking over Philips documentation they don't state total input wattage at all but they do state 0.06W/bulb (per LED) x 30 bulbs, which equals 1.8W, a much more believable wattage for 120 lumens output.
$45 is insanely expensive for a 1.8W light strip that doesn't even come with the bridge. Since you have to buy the bridge anyway to get the effects, they should sell the light strips for $5 each, maybe $10 if it comes with a power supply.
Comments & Reviews (2)
Okay, looking over Philips documentation they don't state total input wattage at all but they do state 0.06W/bulb (per LED) x 30 bulbs, which equals 1.8W, a much more believable wattage for 120 lumens output.
$45 is insanely expensive for a 1.8W light strip that doesn't even come with the bridge. Since you have to buy the bridge anyway to get the effects, they should sell the light strips for $5 each, maybe $10 if it comes with a power supply.
Thank you!