Thomasshawn
Member
Working on lighting a new 3 car garage. 30x50 footprint. one big room but I have 3 doors and 2 ceiling heights.
each bay is ~17 feet wide. 2 outside bays are 10ft ceilings. Middle bay has 15ft ceiling where my 2 post lift will be.
Local electrician did a light plan for me
1. middle 15' section: 6- 150W 20k lumen ASD UFO lights. equally spaced. on dimmers.
2. two outer 10' bays had 8 wafer lights rated at ~950lumen ea. equally spaced on dimmers. I bought the lights and hooked up a few of them in my current garage and the difference between the wafers and the UFO was way too great. my impression is that the center will look very bright but the outer edges are going to look very dark comparatively.
I will primarily do work in the middle bay but it won't be uncommon for me to do small jobs in the outer bays. I want the ability to have them equally lit. for uniformity and for function. I don't want to need to move a car to center bay just to see.
So I reached out to hyperlite to have them draw me a light plan. they initially recommended 8- 150W in the whole garage (112 lumen per foot).

Then after I explained it was 1 big room but 2 ceiling heights they then recommended 4 UFO 100W in each 10' bay (predicted 110 lumen per foot)and either 4 or 6 150W UFO in the 15' section (164 vs 247 per foot)
I'm not to the point of hanging them yet but needing to have electrician start wiring locations soon.
so, I ordered the UFOs and hung them from a short hook on my 10ft ceiling. Using just 1 UFO light, in my otherwise unlit existing garage, standing directly below the light, , I get 280FC but within 7.5 feet I am down to 23FC.
the drop-off in light seems pretty dramatic and I don't see how they can possibly be expected to cover a 17ft wide span with that throw.
So after some discussions they are now recommending I go with linear for less shadows in the corners and edges.
New recommendations- 4- 2ft 160W linear in the 15ft section and 4-2ft 100W linear in each 10ft section.
their maps and calculations show ~85-90 FC at worksurface in all locations.

and they show pretty amazing spread.
So, I also ordered one of their 2ft 160W linear lights (the ones the recommended for the 15' section) and hung it in same spot same distance from the ceiling.
Which has the light surface almost identical to the UFO height in the example above.
I get an impressive max of 375fc standing directly below the light measuring at ~32" from floor (same as I took with the UFO), then standing in the same spot as before (7.5 ft) it drops to 5FC so an even more intense drop-off in light.
Am I expecting too much from these lights?
I find it interesting that I notice the biggest drop-off at 7.5 feet and they have the lights hanging 12.5 feet apart in the maps above.
For comparison, I have a 72W 8600 Lumen 4ft linear I bought off amazon last year (reliability of those specs is unknown) that I used to replace existing fluorescents that were failing. That light gives me 65FC directly below and 5FC at same distance,.7.5Ft
I'm trying not to overthink this but I want to get this right. I am aiming for almost too bright, fine detail task lighting level brightness across the garage, when lights are at at full brightness. then I can use dimmers to dial it back if needed.
I know I'll need drop lights and supplemental lights when under the lift but I want it bright enough when I'm working on wheels and tires or projects on back bench i don't feel the need to open the garage door for extra light like I do now with my 65FC in the center and 5-7 around the edges of the room.
I'm open to suggestions but my testing suggests I'll need twice as many lights as they are calculating to get the coverage I want.
each bay is ~17 feet wide. 2 outside bays are 10ft ceilings. Middle bay has 15ft ceiling where my 2 post lift will be.
Local electrician did a light plan for me
1. middle 15' section: 6- 150W 20k lumen ASD UFO lights. equally spaced. on dimmers.
2. two outer 10' bays had 8 wafer lights rated at ~950lumen ea. equally spaced on dimmers. I bought the lights and hooked up a few of them in my current garage and the difference between the wafers and the UFO was way too great. my impression is that the center will look very bright but the outer edges are going to look very dark comparatively.
I will primarily do work in the middle bay but it won't be uncommon for me to do small jobs in the outer bays. I want the ability to have them equally lit. for uniformity and for function. I don't want to need to move a car to center bay just to see.
So I reached out to hyperlite to have them draw me a light plan. they initially recommended 8- 150W in the whole garage (112 lumen per foot).

Then after I explained it was 1 big room but 2 ceiling heights they then recommended 4 UFO 100W in each 10' bay (predicted 110 lumen per foot)and either 4 or 6 150W UFO in the 15' section (164 vs 247 per foot)
I'm not to the point of hanging them yet but needing to have electrician start wiring locations soon.
so, I ordered the UFOs and hung them from a short hook on my 10ft ceiling. Using just 1 UFO light, in my otherwise unlit existing garage, standing directly below the light, , I get 280FC but within 7.5 feet I am down to 23FC.
the drop-off in light seems pretty dramatic and I don't see how they can possibly be expected to cover a 17ft wide span with that throw.
So after some discussions they are now recommending I go with linear for less shadows in the corners and edges.
New recommendations- 4- 2ft 160W linear in the 15ft section and 4-2ft 100W linear in each 10ft section.
their maps and calculations show ~85-90 FC at worksurface in all locations.

and they show pretty amazing spread.So, I also ordered one of their 2ft 160W linear lights (the ones the recommended for the 15' section) and hung it in same spot same distance from the ceiling.
Which has the light surface almost identical to the UFO height in the example above.
I get an impressive max of 375fc standing directly below the light measuring at ~32" from floor (same as I took with the UFO), then standing in the same spot as before (7.5 ft) it drops to 5FC so an even more intense drop-off in light.
Am I expecting too much from these lights?
I find it interesting that I notice the biggest drop-off at 7.5 feet and they have the lights hanging 12.5 feet apart in the maps above.
For comparison, I have a 72W 8600 Lumen 4ft linear I bought off amazon last year (reliability of those specs is unknown) that I used to replace existing fluorescents that were failing. That light gives me 65FC directly below and 5FC at same distance,.7.5Ft
I'm trying not to overthink this but I want to get this right. I am aiming for almost too bright, fine detail task lighting level brightness across the garage, when lights are at at full brightness. then I can use dimmers to dial it back if needed.
I know I'll need drop lights and supplemental lights when under the lift but I want it bright enough when I'm working on wheels and tires or projects on back bench i don't feel the need to open the garage door for extra light like I do now with my 65FC in the center and 5-7 around the edges of the room.
I'm open to suggestions but my testing suggests I'll need twice as many lights as they are calculating to get the coverage I want.
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