Key LED Lighting Terms Explained
Always Compare Effective Lumens — Not Watts or Raw Lumens
Shopping for LED lights can feel overwhelming with all the technical terminology. This guide breaks down the most important terms in plain language so you can make a confident, informed decision.
Brightness — What Actually Matters
❌ Watts Do Not Equal Brightness
A common misconception carried over from the halogen era. With LEDs, wattage measures power consumption — not light output. A lower-watt LED can easily outshine a higher-watt halogen or a poorly designed LED.
✅ Lumens = Brightness
Lumens measure the total amount of visible light a source produces. More lumens = brighter light. This is the number to focus on when comparing products.
Raw Lumens vs. Effective Lumens
Not all lumen figures are equal — and this is where many buyers get misled.
| Raw Lumens | Effective Lumens | |
|---|---|---|
| What it measures | Theoretical maximum output of the LED chips | Real-world usable light output |
| Accounts for losses? | ❌ No | ✅ Yes — electrical and optical losses included |
| Tested how? | Calculated on paper | Measured with photometric testing equipment |
| Use for comparisons? | ❌ No | ✅ Always |
💡 Bottom line: When comparing two products, always use Effective Lumens. Raw Lumens can be misleading because they don't reflect what actually reaches the road.
Other Key Terms
Lux / Foot-Candle
Measures how much light falls on a specific surface at a given distance. Useful for understanding brightness at a point — for example, how bright your headlight appears on the road 50 feet ahead.
Color Temperature (Kelvin)
Describes the color appearance of the light — not how bright it is.
| Kelvin Range | Appearance | Example |
|---|---|---|
| ~3000K | Warm, yellowish white | Similar to halogen bulbs |
| 4000–5000K | Neutral white | Natural daylight |
| 5000–6000K | Cool, crisp white | Typical of J.W. Speaker LEDs |
💡 Most drivers find cool white (5000–6000K) provides better contrast and visibility at night compared to the warmer yellow tones of halogen.
Beam Pattern
Describes the shape and direction of the light output.
| Beam Type | Coverage | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| Spot | Narrow, long-range | Seeing far down the road |
| Flood | Wide, short-range | Broad area coverage up close |
| Dual Burn® | Wide + long-range combined | J.W. Speaker high beam technology |
IP Rating
Indicates how well a light is protected against dust and water ingress.
| Rating | Dust Protection | Water Protection |
|---|---|---|
| IP67 | Dust-tight | Waterproof to 1 meter for 30 minutes |
| IP69K | Dust-tight | Withstands high-pressure water jets |
✅ Most J.W. Speaker products carry IP67 or IP69K ratings — built for demanding on-road and off-road conditions.
Quick Reference Cheat Sheet
| Term | What It Tells You | Use It For |
|---|---|---|
| Watts | Power consumption | Electrical load planning only |
| Effective Lumens | Real-world brightness | Comparing products |
| Lux | Brightness at a distance | Understanding road illumination |
| Kelvin | Light color appearance | Choosing your preferred look |
| Beam Pattern | Shape of light output | Matching light to application |
| IP Rating | Dust & water resistance | Assessing durability |
📄 Want to see the specs for a specific J.W. Speaker product? Every model has a full Specification Sheet available on its product page at jwspeaker.com — look for Effective Lumens, color temperature, beam pattern, and IP rating for every light we make.