Indeed I switch the main light off and just use the spot lamp which originally took a tungsten filament part silvered spot. I'll see has it any writing. It may be a UK BC type and possibly you use the European ES (slightly larger than USA by maybe 1mm). However in the local shops the screw type are now easier to find than BC, despite most Irish light fittings using the UK BC socket. Oddly the UK owned chain stores are worst.
There are four of these sticks inside the lamp
https://ledvista.ie/blog/led-filamen...f-both-worlds/
OK, went and checked. Unusually for here, my beside clip on spot lamp does use the Euro ES.
It's an Osram R63 style, 4.5W, E27 fitting and 24mA for 220V to 240V. The model might be AC02275. It's warmish 2700K (I have a scary 4300K LED stick lamp in my library, quite blue). Claims 370 lumens.
I've tried various lamps and these LED sticks are the only thing approaching halogen in pleasantness. Ones with better colour rendition (not needed for reading and unconnected to colour temperature) are less efficient, some are alleged to mix in red and cyan LEDs on the sticks to fill gaps in the spectrum. Regular LED lamps using only blue, violet or near UV chips only with a simple yellow phosphor can be any colour temperature, depending on phosphor amount, but are rubbish at the cyan part of the spectrum.
Because of the low power density compared to 1 to 8 COB /COG high power LEDS the phosphor and chips last longer. Also most CFL have electronic ballast and LEDs use low voltage thus a SMPSU that generates RF interference. The RFI testing is not realistic, so they interfere badly with LW / MW and SW radio. The Stick type don't have a switching PSU as the series LEDs add up. So one less thing to fail and no interference.