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Crawlspace lighting?

Raisedonadeere

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Joined
Jul 31, 2017
Messages
436
Location
Central KY
I need to be able to flip aswitch and light up my 30’x60’ crawl space. It is 3’ 4” tall. Don’t need working space grade lighting but enough to navigate and not be blinded by lights in my face. I am thinking lots of little lights or some sort of string of LEDs. Simple enough I thought until I started trying to put together a plan. Suddenly gets expensive. I can do wiring, gfi’s, junction boxes so don’t
necesaily need plug and play.

I am now thinking I will just use a high wattage spot light on a cord that I can just drag around for projects and leave at door for quick look when I smell or hear something or trying to remember what I stored down there.
 
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akasrick

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Joined
Apr 10, 2017
Messages
794
Location
south jersey
I need to be able to flip aswitch and light up my 30’x60’ crawl space. It is 3’ 4” tall. Don’t need working space grade lighting but enough to navigate and not be blinded by lights in my face. I am thinking lots of little lights or some sort of string of LEDs. Simple enough I thought until I started trying to put together a plan. Suddenly gets expensive. I can do wiring, gfi’s, junction boxes so don’t
necesaily need plug and play.

I am now thinking I will just use a high wattage spot light on a cord that I can just drag around for projects and leave at door for quick look when I smell or hear something or trying to remember what I stored down there.

I added a receptacle in the middle, a recorded trouble light that reaches all corners, paneling, plywood cutoffs to anyplace I need to go to.

akasrick
 

ddawg16

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Joined
Jul 11, 2008
Messages
21,005
Location
S. California
I installed some T5 lights in my crawl space with a switch next to the access hatch.

I run them off a GFCI outlet at my load center. I also have an outlet down there so I don't have to run an extension cord.

My only mistake...I should have ran 2 ckts...one for the outlet and one of the lights...that way, if I trip the outlet, I still have lights.
 

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bullnerd

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Sep 17, 2012
Messages
5,690
Location
Jersey
I use the sams club 4' leds, easy to install, and the bulb wont fall out or pop when i bump into it.
 

fourjeepin

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Joined
Feb 12, 2011
Messages
3,653
Location
Atlanta, GA
Rope lights? Led ones are speedy, but if you aren’t running them for long, just go with the inexpensive incandescents.
 
OP
R

Raisedonadeere

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Joined
Jul 31, 2017
Messages
436
Location
Central KY
Got some very helpful ideas from these responses. A center receptacle, the string lights, replacing the bulbs with LED, and separate circuit for power so I lights don’t go out from overloaded power cord. I first thought the tube lights would be good but I am mostly needing to light the overhead area. Corded light and string lights are more adaptable to projects, I envision.

BTW I am sealing and insulating my crawl space to make it part of the conditioned air of my house. Made possible by seeing to gravity drainage of the outside foundation and sealing the wall before backfilling. I expect to not be dealing with critters and musty spider infested corners. Put 14” metal termite shield between foundation and house.
 

High5

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Joined
May 10, 2014
Messages
72
Location
Washington state
We installed 14 lights in our crawlspace. I used a power strip located next to the entrance so I can flip the power on and off. The strip is plugged it into a outdoor rated GFI plug. Then took a heavy duty extension cord and cut the female end off; wired it into the first J box and plugged the other end into the power strip. Then daisy chained the remaining J boxes. We used LED light bulbs screwed into standard bases. Works like a champ. Contractors rave about how nice it is to work down there.
 
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exranger06

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Aug 9, 2015
Messages
1,686
Location
CT
I would install a bunch of round ceiling boxes throughout the space, and string up some Romex to connect them all together. Then you can use some plain ceramic bases to screw regular light bulbs into. If you're concerned about smacking into and breaking bulbs, you can buy low-profile LED bulbs that completely replace the ceramic bases and they screw right onto the round boxes. Install a toggle switch right at the entrance. Code now requires crawl space lighting to be GFCI protected.
^This is how I lit my crawl space, but it's a very small space so I only needed one fixture.
 
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ddurrett896

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Mar 29, 2015
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994
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VA
I would install a bunch of round ceiling boxes throughout the space, and string up some Romex to connect them all together. Then you can use some plain ceramic bases to screw regular light bulbs into. If you're concerned about smacking into and breaking bulbs, you can buy low-profile LED bulbs that completely replace the ceramic bases and they screw right onto the round boxes. Install a toggle switch right at the entrance. Code now requires crawl space lighting to be GFCI protected.
^This is how I lit my crawl space, but it's a very small space so I only needed one fixture.

+1

Did this in my attic for like $5/light (LED bulb included)
 
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ddawg16

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Jul 11, 2008
Messages
21,005
Location
S. California
Rope lights? Led ones are speedy, but if you aren’t running them for long, just go with the inexpensive incandescents.

Incandescent's? Why? They use 5x more electricity, don't last nearly as long, burn out easy if you bump them....and are a potential fire hazard.
 

theoldwizard1

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Joined
Feb 22, 2011
Messages
43,076
Location
SE MI
Wait a couple more months and then buy some LED Christmas lights, probably the 100 count ones. You will need 4 or more sets. Hook them together with an extension cord and run that to a duplex outlet that you install by the entrance.

If you really want to save money, wait until about 1 or 2 weeks before Christmas. HD starts knocking the price down A LOT !
 

finn

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Mar 27, 2005
Messages
16,183
Location
The UP, God's country
Incandescent bulbs potentially supply some heat in sub zero temperatures. It’s not going to bring the crawl to shirtsleeve temperatures, but a half dozen coul help in a marginal freezing situation. When I was a kid, this was common in unheated crawl spaces .

Bulb life isn’t a problem in a crawl space, as you really don’t spend a lot of time down there.
 

Shiftless

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Joined
Mar 9, 2014
Messages
14,463
Location
East Bay SFO
I like the string light suggestion from several members.

I have obviously been spending too much time on GJ being influenced by the “overkill” approach of many members. :)
Here is what I installed a few weeks ago to light up part of my house’s crawl space.
 

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theoldwizard1

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SE MI
Incandescent bulbs potentially supply some heat in sub zero temperatures. It’s not going to bring the crawl to shirtsleeve temperatures, but a half dozen coul help in a marginal freezing situation. When I was a kid, this was common in unheated crawl spaces .

A lot of well pumps "up North" had one or more 100W light bulbs in the "pump house". I would not be surprised if some still do !
 

JRC3

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Joined
Jun 30, 2014
Messages
12,481
Location
Southwestern OH
3 years ago I put 9 lamp-holders in with 100W equivalent CFLs. I need to replace them with LEDs. Up top right by the crawlspace opening I have a switch with a pilot light and a GFCI feeding it.

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Heck...Plastic boxes, lamp sockets, Romex, wire staples, pilot-light switch...Like 40 bucks or so.
 
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