American Locomotive
Well-known member
So for a while now, I've been a big proponent of good T5/T8 fluorescent fixtures, and advising people to stay away from the cheap LED fixtures (and suggesting they buy higher end ones).
Well today I was out and came across 4-foot LED shop-lights for $15/each. 5000K, 4100 lumens, 40 watts, 80 CRI. With two frosted "tubes" in each fixture to better distribute the light. Each one has a standard 2-prong outlet opposite side of the cord for daisy-chaining.
They were just so absurdly cheap, I couldn't pass up buying a few of them. I put them in my basement to replace some old 8' T12 fixtures w/ 5000K DSGN50 bulbs, and I've gotta say I'm actually pretty impressed. The light quality seems pretty close to the DSGN50 bulbs, but the LED fixtures are significantly brighter at about half the power consumption.
The tubes only get warm to the touch, so I'm hoping they'll avoid the early death that many hot-running LED lights seem to experience. Time will tell though. If they do die early, I'm only out $15/fixture, so not a big deal.
Well today I was out and came across 4-foot LED shop-lights for $15/each. 5000K, 4100 lumens, 40 watts, 80 CRI. With two frosted "tubes" in each fixture to better distribute the light. Each one has a standard 2-prong outlet opposite side of the cord for daisy-chaining.
They were just so absurdly cheap, I couldn't pass up buying a few of them. I put them in my basement to replace some old 8' T12 fixtures w/ 5000K DSGN50 bulbs, and I've gotta say I'm actually pretty impressed. The light quality seems pretty close to the DSGN50 bulbs, but the LED fixtures are significantly brighter at about half the power consumption.
The tubes only get warm to the touch, so I'm hoping they'll avoid the early death that many hot-running LED lights seem to experience. Time will tell though. If they do die early, I'm only out $15/fixture, so not a big deal.