rR

[email protected] (Richard)

03/03/2004 7:03 AM

Lighting my new shop

Hi --

I would like to install 4 tube fluorescent light fixtures in my
renovated shop but can't seem to find any easily -- done a bunch of
searching, but the only results are expensive enclosed office styles.
Anyone know a source for a plain model?

thanks,

Richard


This topic has 19 replies

RC

"Randy Chapman"

in reply to [email protected] (Richard) on 03/03/2004 7:03 AM

05/03/2004 2:59 PM


I just bought twelve 2-tube, 4 foot T8 units from home depot -- in the
vicinity of $10 each. Put 8 of them up so far for general light, and will
be adding one more ceiling light to cover the door, and the other three for
task lights. This is in a 12x22 space (1 car garage). I don't have a light
meter, but I'm pretty certain that I've got it above noon sunlight in
brightness. Hurts the eyes when you first turn it on, and makes the inside
of the house look awfully dim afterwards, but it is sure nice when out
there. FWIW.

--randy

"Richard" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Thanks for all the prompt comments -- I was thinking of 4 of the 4
> tube X 4 ' fixtures for general lighting of a 16' x 20' area --
> perhaps I'll just double up the 2 tube units: I was being lazy :-)
>
> I'm a big fan of extra task lighting, so plan to supplement that with
> extra at the main work stations.
> My shop has high celings -- the underside of the roof, about 11' at
> the top of the wall and going up to about 16' at the peak. I'm just
> finishing up the ceiling, which is panels of industrial dropped
> ceiling -- basically 1" of compressed fiberglass with a semigloss
> white plastic facing -- I didn't want to paint or sheetrock that high
> of a space, plus I get some insulating value out of it over the
> between the rafters batts.
> I wondered about how much lighting I'll need but have noticed that
> just one 150W halogen worklight directed onto the ceiling does a
> halfway decent job of general lighting. Am I way off to figure 16 X 32
> 4' fluorescents = 512W will more than double that?
>
> Cheers --

CW

"Chipper Wood"

in reply to [email protected] (Richard) on 03/03/2004 7:03 AM

03/03/2004 10:25 PM

Hi Richard,

Some things you might not have considered, Diffusers on fixtures help
broaden the area of illumination and different types of florescent lamp
phosphors will appear brighter. I recently installed 'Wrap Around' 2 light
fixtures in my son's garashop. 'Cool White' lamps seemed the brightest by
test. Ceiling and walls are plain white. 9 foot Sheet Rock ceiling. Fixtures
on 4 foot width and end spacing. 2 and 4 light surface mounted clear Wrap
Around fixtures are available at Lowes and HD. Not expensive stock items.
For the open shade type fixtures, Do a search for 'Industrial Lighting
Fixtures Florescent'. Graingers usually only discounts from TOP retail
pricing to established business customers. Wholesale electrical supply
companies sell at Jobber prices.
--
Chipper Wood

useours, yours won't work



"Richard" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Hi --
>
> I would like to install 4 tube fluorescent light fixtures in my
> renovated shop but can't seem to find any easily -- done a bunch of
> searching, but the only results are expensive enclosed office styles.
> Anyone know a source for a plain model?
>
> thanks,
>
> Richard

cC

[email protected] (Charles Erskine)

in reply to [email protected] (Richard) on 03/03/2004 7:03 AM

03/03/2004 2:06 PM

This company may have a location near you:

http://www.grainger.com

Search under "fluorescent fixtures"

[email protected] (Richard) wrote in message news:<[email protected]>...
> Hi --
>
> I would like to install 4 tube fluorescent light fixtures in my
> renovated shop but can't seem to find any easily -- done a bunch of
> searching, but the only results are expensive enclosed office styles.
> Anyone know a source for a plain model?
>
> thanks,
>
> Richard

md

"mttt"

in reply to [email protected] (Richard) on 03/03/2004 7:03 AM

05/03/2004 4:44 PM


"Bay Area Dave" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
>
> maybe those celestial bodies you used to view have gone out! :)
>

The hard part about peepin' with a real telescope is getting used to seeing
everything upsidedown...

JG

"Jerry Gilreath"

in reply to [email protected] (Richard) on 03/03/2004 7:03 AM

03/03/2004 4:28 PM

Well, you will now you said that. Luck of the draw. <G>

--
"Cartoons don't have any deep meaning.
They're just stupid drawings that give you a cheap laugh."
Homer Simpson
Jerry© The Phoneman®
"Gary" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Look in the yellow pages under Electrical Supply. Probaby won't find them
in
> a borg.
> I outfitted my shop with 4 bulb fixtures (15 of them to be exact on 2
> circuits), painted my walls white and have excellent lighting in every
> corner of my shop. Well worth it in my opinion.
> And come to think of it, the shop is now about 12 years old and I've never
> had to change a bulb in any of the fixtures.
>
> Gary
>
>
> "Richard" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
> > Hi --
> >
> > I would like to install 4 tube fluorescent light fixtures in my
> > renovated shop but can't seem to find any easily -- done a bunch of
> > searching, but the only results are expensive enclosed office styles.
> > Anyone know a source for a plain model?
> >
> > thanks,
> >
> > Richard
>
>

BA

Bay Area Dave

in reply to [email protected] (Richard) on 03/03/2004 7:03 AM

05/03/2004 6:32 PM

I bet it wouldn't bother a dentist. <g> I never thought about the image
not being "right". Are you talking about a reflector scope as opposed
to a refracting scope?

dave

mttt wrote:

> "Bay Area Dave" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
>
>>
>>maybe those celestial bodies you used to view have gone out! :)
>>
>
>
> The hard part about peepin' with a real telescope is getting used to seeing
> everything upsidedown...
>
>

Gg

"Gary"

in reply to [email protected] (Richard) on 03/03/2004 7:03 AM

03/03/2004 3:39 PM

Look in the yellow pages under Electrical Supply. Probaby won't find them in
a borg.
I outfitted my shop with 4 bulb fixtures (15 of them to be exact on 2
circuits), painted my walls white and have excellent lighting in every
corner of my shop. Well worth it in my opinion.
And come to think of it, the shop is now about 12 years old and I've never
had to change a bulb in any of the fixtures.

Gary


"Richard" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Hi --
>
> I would like to install 4 tube fluorescent light fixtures in my
> renovated shop but can't seem to find any easily -- done a bunch of
> searching, but the only results are expensive enclosed office styles.
> Anyone know a source for a plain model?
>
> thanks,
>
> Richard

BA

Bay Area Dave

in reply to [email protected] (Richard) on 03/03/2004 7:03 AM

05/03/2004 2:14 AM

maybe those celestial bodies you used to view have gone out! :)

dave

mttt wrote:
> "Bay Area Dave" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
>
>>Bottom line, don't listen to anybody else's opinion on lighting
>>recommendations: do what pleases YOUR eyes.
>>
>
>
> Well said!
>
> Age has something to do with it too... :) My wife can read by a 4 watt
> nightlight - 30 feet away. Me -- I've noticed my night vision has
> deteriorated significantly.
>
> My biggest disappointment was finally putting my eyes back to a decent
> telescope after 30 years. (Had an Edmund Sci 4.25" reflector as a boy).
> Man - was that depressing to not be able to see things that had been such a
> thrill as a child...
>
>

GJ

"Gregory Jensen"

in reply to [email protected] (Richard) on 03/03/2004 7:03 AM

03/03/2004 10:29 AM

thanks Ed..good point about the paint..
I have two 4 ft 4 blub fixtures and needed more light.. I Painted the whole
shop White Now I need to wear sunglasses (g)


--
Gregory Jensen
1990 Heritage
http://www.gjensen1.dns2go.com

"Richard" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Hi --
>
> I would like to install 4 tube fluorescent light fixtures in my
> renovated shop but can't seem to find any easily -- done a bunch of
> searching, but the only results are expensive enclosed office styles.
> Anyone know a source for a plain model?
>
> thanks,
>
> Richard

EC

Ed Clarke

in reply to [email protected] (Richard) on 03/03/2004 7:03 AM

03/03/2004 4:19 PM

In article <[email protected]>, Richard wrote:
> Hi --
>
> I would like to install 4 tube fluorescent light fixtures in my
> renovated shop but can't seem to find any easily -- done a bunch of
> searching, but the only results are expensive enclosed office styles.
> Anyone know a source for a plain model?

The BORG - Home Depot. Eight foot long, four bulb with electronic balast
for about $40 each. Quick start in cold weather. I have four of them
in my shop. Paint the walls and ceiling white, floor too if you have a
cement floor.

NB

"Nate B"

in reply to [email protected] (Richard) on 03/03/2004 7:03 AM

03/03/2004 9:32 AM


"Ed Clarke"

> The BORG - Home Depot.

Yes, though Lowe's tends to be a little cheaper for light fixtures for the
same models..

> Eight foot long, four bulb with electronic balast
> for about $40 each.

Seems like a T-12 bulb price. The T-8's are about 2X. Maybe worth it,
maybe not. I went with T-8's probably because I didn't have many fixtures
to buy.

> I have four of them in my shop.

I have 3 2-bulb fixtures and 1 4-bulb fixture. If I was to do it over
again, I would go with another 2 2-bulb fixtures instead of the 4-bulb.
Unless you have really large shop with high ceilings, the 2-bulb fixtures
will look better and spread the light out a little better, IMO.

- Nate


rR

[email protected] (Richard)

in reply to [email protected] (Richard) on 03/03/2004 7:03 AM

04/03/2004 10:51 AM

Thanks for all the prompt comments -- I was thinking of 4 of the 4
tube X 4 ' fixtures for general lighting of a 16' x 20' area --
perhaps I'll just double up the 2 tube units: I was being lazy :-)

I'm a big fan of extra task lighting, so plan to supplement that with
extra at the main work stations.
My shop has high celings -- the underside of the roof, about 11' at
the top of the wall and going up to about 16' at the peak. I'm just
finishing up the ceiling, which is panels of industrial dropped
ceiling -- basically 1" of compressed fiberglass with a semigloss
white plastic facing -- I didn't want to paint or sheetrock that high
of a space, plus I get some insulating value out of it over the
between the rafters batts.
I wondered about how much lighting I'll need but have noticed that
just one 150W halogen worklight directed onto the ceiling does a
halfway decent job of general lighting. Am I way off to figure 16 X 32
4' fluorescents = 512W will more than double that?

Cheers --

BA

Bay Area Dave

in reply to [email protected] (Richard) on 03/03/2004 7:03 AM

04/03/2004 7:26 PM

everyone has a different idea of adequate light. I have 11 4 footers in
my shop which was a 2 car garage of standard proportions. over my roll
cabinet which is set under a large overhead cabinet, I put in 3 halogen
"puck" lights, thinking I'd have enough light for close up detail work;
it isn't enough. On the other hand my wife will read or do dishes in a
semi-dark room.

Bottom line, don't listen to anybody else's opinion on lighting
recommendations: do what pleases YOUR eyes.

dave

Richard wrote:

> Thanks for all the prompt comments -- I was thinking of 4 of the 4
> tube X 4 ' fixtures for general lighting of a 16' x 20' area --
> perhaps I'll just double up the 2 tube units: I was being lazy :-)
>
> I'm a big fan of extra task lighting, so plan to supplement that with
> extra at the main work stations.
> My shop has high celings -- the underside of the roof, about 11' at
> the top of the wall and going up to about 16' at the peak. I'm just
> finishing up the ceiling, which is panels of industrial dropped
> ceiling -- basically 1" of compressed fiberglass with a semigloss
> white plastic facing -- I didn't want to paint or sheetrock that high
> of a space, plus I get some insulating value out of it over the
> between the rafters batts.
> I wondered about how much lighting I'll need but have noticed that
> just one 150W halogen worklight directed onto the ceiling does a
> halfway decent job of general lighting. Am I way off to figure 16 X 32
> 4' fluorescents = 512W will more than double that?
>
> Cheers --

md

"mttt"

in reply to [email protected] (Richard) on 03/03/2004 7:03 AM

04/03/2004 11:44 PM


"Bay Area Dave" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
> Bottom line, don't listen to anybody else's opinion on lighting
> recommendations: do what pleases YOUR eyes.
>

Well said!

Age has something to do with it too... :) My wife can read by a 4 watt
nightlight - 30 feet away. Me -- I've noticed my night vision has
deteriorated significantly.

My biggest disappointment was finally putting my eyes back to a decent
telescope after 30 years. (Had an Edmund Sci 4.25" reflector as a boy).
Man - was that depressing to not be able to see things that had been such a
thrill as a child...

Ba

B a r r y

in reply to [email protected] (Richard) on 03/03/2004 7:03 AM

03/03/2004 4:57 PM

On Wed, 03 Mar 2004 15:39:26 GMT, "Gary"
<[email protected]> wrote:


>I outfitted my shop with 4 bulb fixtures (15 of them to be exact on 2
>circuits), painted my walls white and have excellent lighting in every
>corner of my shop. Well worth it in my opinion.

Unless you have a huge shop, it sounds like you've got more light than
a pro baseball park. <G>

>And come to think of it, the shop is now about 12 years old and I've never
>had to change a bulb in any of the fixtures.

Fluorescent bulbs dim slowly with time. You've got tons of light, so
it may not matter. It's not out of the ordinary to have to "relamp"
fluorescent fixtures before the bulbs go out.

Barry

EP

"Edwin Pawlowski"

in reply to [email protected] (Richard) on 03/03/2004 7:03 AM

03/03/2004 3:20 PM


"Richard" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Hi --
>
> I would like to install 4 tube fluorescent light fixtures in my
> renovated shop but can't seem to find any easily -- done a bunch of
> searching, but the only results are expensive enclosed office styles.
> Anyone know a source for a plain model?
>
> thanks,
>
> Richard

Probably be cheaper to use two 2 tube models and space them a bit. The 4
tube fixtures are used mostly in commercial/industrial settings and not
found in the big box store along with the $10 ones.

Check with some used equipment places or demolition places. They may have
them very cheap.
Ed

WS

Wes Stewart

in reply to [email protected] (Richard) on 03/03/2004 7:03 AM

03/03/2004 9:49 AM

On 3 Mar 2004 07:03:29 -0800, [email protected] (Richard) wrote:

|Hi --
|
|I would like to install 4 tube fluorescent light fixtures in my
|renovated shop but can't seem to find any easily -- done a bunch of
|searching, but the only results are expensive enclosed office styles.
|Anyone know a source for a plain model?

You don't specify four or eight foot bulbs. If four, then HD has a
four tube model (32W) for about $45.

Be advised however, that the electronic ballasts are high frequency
and *not* rfi (radio frequency interference) suppressed. In my
location I was unable to watch off-the-air TV with the lights running.

After considerable research and haggling I got HD to special order
"residential" ballasts that do have rfi suppression and the problem is
solved. I had the hassle of three more trips to HD and the R&R.

Ba

B a r r y

in reply to [email protected] (Richard) on 03/03/2004 7:03 AM

05/03/2004 9:34 PM

On Fri, 05 Mar 2004 16:44:35 GMT, "mttt" <[email protected]>
wrote:

>
>"Bay Area Dave" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>news:[email protected]...
>>
>>
>> maybe those celestial bodies you used to view have gone out! :)
>>
>
>The hard part about peepin' with a real telescope is getting used to seeing
>everything upsidedown...
>


Can you say Terrestrial Eyepiece? <G>

Barry

WS

Wes Stewart

in reply to [email protected] (Richard) on 03/03/2004 7:03 AM

04/03/2004 5:30 PM

On 4 Mar 2004 10:51:40 -0800, [email protected] (Richard) wrote:

|Thanks for all the prompt comments -- I was thinking of 4 of the 4
|tube X 4 ' fixtures for general lighting of a 16' x 20' area --
|perhaps I'll just double up the 2 tube units: I was being lazy :-)

The 4-tube 4-foot Lithonia fixtures from HD that I spoke of earlier
would be inadequate IMHO for an area this large with only four
fixtures.

FYI, I bought just one and mounted it and took a few measurements
before committing to more fixtures. My "shop" is one end of the
garage, which measures 28' deep by 30' wide. The fixed shop portion
is the 8' x 30' space not occupied by a Camaro and a pickup truck.
With the exception of the white painted firewall between the garage
and the living space the rest of the surfaces are unpainted I-joists,
2 x 6's, plywood and OSB.

For my "light survey" I used a 50 year old GE selenium light meter
mounted on a tripod at a fixed distance about four feet above the
floor. While the meter indicates foot-candles the cell is old and
temperature sensitive so I used it for relative measurements only.

I found that I could illuminate this space uniformly with three
fixtures, mounted side-to-side on 8' centers, with the fixture ends 2'
from the long wall and 9' high.

Wes


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