karsty
Member
Hi everyone, this is my first post here! I hope I can get some guidance from some of you.
I have a 22'x22' garage with a 9'-6" ceiling height. It will have white painted drywalled walls and ceiling. I built my garage so that I can work in it. I want it to be useable for working on cars, and general mechanic stuff, etc. Lots of light output and good light distribution are my main goals. Right now I'm trying to determine how many fluorescent lights I need and where to position them on the ceiling to attain those goals.
I was thinking of going with these fixtures: http://www.homedepot.ca/webapp/wcs/...ode+matchall&recN=172487&N=0&Ntk=P_PartNumber As you can see they have a reflector hood on them. I figure that would be a good thing for getting the light directed down and out. Thoughts on this?
I would get 4 of these fixtures which would equal to 16 - 32w T8 bulbs. I have a garage door opener running down the center of the garage, so I was thinking of running two sets of these 8' fixtures back to back in a row (16' long total) in the middle of one bay, and the same on the other side. Basically one row(16') of these fixtures would be spaced evenly between the side wall and the garage opener, and the same on the other side of the opener.
I plan on running a 5000k, 32W Philips Alto II lights with around 2950 lumens.
So the question is, are these fixtures/bulbs and this layout going to provide me with the best lighting for working on cars, etc and the best light distribution(little to no shadows)?
The other option I thought of was to go with these fixtures: http://www.homedepot.ca/webapp/wcs/...ode+matchall&recN=172487&N=0&Ntk=P_PartNumber
With these lights I would run 4 rows of single bulb fixtures, with 4 fixtures back to back in each row (hope that makes sense). There would still be 16 bulbs total. Would I get better lighting and light distribution by going this route? This option would require more wiring, but if it gives better results then I will consider it.
Just a side note, I downloaded a program(DIALux) to try to assist me in figuring this all out, and I don't really know how to work it or get the results I'm looking for. I read on here about using the method of a certain amount of lumens/SF method. So 2950 lumens per bulb X 16 bulbs = 47,200 lumens. Inside area of garage is 441 SF. 47200/441 = 107 lumens/SF. Is that good lighting???
Anyways, any help/direction you can give me on this would be greatly appreciated. If you can suggest a better layout or better type of fixture, then please do. Looking for the best results in my garage if possible.
Thanks in advance!!
Shaun
I have a 22'x22' garage with a 9'-6" ceiling height. It will have white painted drywalled walls and ceiling. I built my garage so that I can work in it. I want it to be useable for working on cars, and general mechanic stuff, etc. Lots of light output and good light distribution are my main goals. Right now I'm trying to determine how many fluorescent lights I need and where to position them on the ceiling to attain those goals.
I was thinking of going with these fixtures: http://www.homedepot.ca/webapp/wcs/...ode+matchall&recN=172487&N=0&Ntk=P_PartNumber As you can see they have a reflector hood on them. I figure that would be a good thing for getting the light directed down and out. Thoughts on this?
I would get 4 of these fixtures which would equal to 16 - 32w T8 bulbs. I have a garage door opener running down the center of the garage, so I was thinking of running two sets of these 8' fixtures back to back in a row (16' long total) in the middle of one bay, and the same on the other side. Basically one row(16') of these fixtures would be spaced evenly between the side wall and the garage opener, and the same on the other side of the opener.
I plan on running a 5000k, 32W Philips Alto II lights with around 2950 lumens.
So the question is, are these fixtures/bulbs and this layout going to provide me with the best lighting for working on cars, etc and the best light distribution(little to no shadows)?
The other option I thought of was to go with these fixtures: http://www.homedepot.ca/webapp/wcs/...ode+matchall&recN=172487&N=0&Ntk=P_PartNumber
With these lights I would run 4 rows of single bulb fixtures, with 4 fixtures back to back in each row (hope that makes sense). There would still be 16 bulbs total. Would I get better lighting and light distribution by going this route? This option would require more wiring, but if it gives better results then I will consider it.
Just a side note, I downloaded a program(DIALux) to try to assist me in figuring this all out, and I don't really know how to work it or get the results I'm looking for. I read on here about using the method of a certain amount of lumens/SF method. So 2950 lumens per bulb X 16 bulbs = 47,200 lumens. Inside area of garage is 441 SF. 47200/441 = 107 lumens/SF. Is that good lighting???
Anyways, any help/direction you can give me on this would be greatly appreciated. If you can suggest a better layout or better type of fixture, then please do. Looking for the best results in my garage if possible.
Thanks in advance!!
Shaun