I have a roughly 37' x 26' newly-built garage that's basically 3/4 vehicle space and 1/4 workshop. It has six keyless fixtures and bulbs at present in advance of having final fixtures chosen and installed.
The car space will have 2-3 four-post stacking storage/service lifts. To retain aas much vertical clearance as possible, I'm tending to favor two eight-foot flush-mount fluorescent strips oriented longitudinally above each lift and a similar pair with reflectors suspended from the ceiling over the workshop.
Conceptually, I'm pretty solid. There's not a whole lot of better configurations our there for something so straightforward, albeit the opportunity remains to compliment the overhead lights with various other types of lighting throughout the space. Before I default to the simplest and cheapest fixtures I can source, I'm hoping for some input and suggestions about a handful of details.
1. Some 8' fixtures are now two abutted 4' fixtures that act as one. Beyond bulbs that are easier to source and handle, would choosing the abutted fixtures over the single, continuous 8' versions have any particular advantages or drawbacks?
2. In terms of overall light quality, would I be better-served by choosing ceiling-mounted fixtures with plastic diffuser lenses? If so, would the effect be substantial?
3. Understanding that doubling the equivalent bulb count would also increase the amount of light, would choosing four-bulb fixtures rather than tandem be overkill - or even yield an uncomfortable amount of light?
4. Are suspended fixtures a better choice for the workshop rather than flush-mount? The workshop portion is only about 10 feet wide, so one set of fixtures down the centerline should be enough to provide even coverage. Here too, would I be better-off with lensed surface mounted fixtures rather than suspended fixtures with reflectors? Would two or four-bulb variants be best?
I know much can be derived from the specs and math but only in relative terms. I'd appreciate any first-hand input from others who've implemented any lighting solutions similar to these for a more subjective perspective before committing.
Many thanks in advance to any and all with insight to contribute.
The car space will have 2-3 four-post stacking storage/service lifts. To retain aas much vertical clearance as possible, I'm tending to favor two eight-foot flush-mount fluorescent strips oriented longitudinally above each lift and a similar pair with reflectors suspended from the ceiling over the workshop.
Conceptually, I'm pretty solid. There's not a whole lot of better configurations our there for something so straightforward, albeit the opportunity remains to compliment the overhead lights with various other types of lighting throughout the space. Before I default to the simplest and cheapest fixtures I can source, I'm hoping for some input and suggestions about a handful of details.
1. Some 8' fixtures are now two abutted 4' fixtures that act as one. Beyond bulbs that are easier to source and handle, would choosing the abutted fixtures over the single, continuous 8' versions have any particular advantages or drawbacks?
2. In terms of overall light quality, would I be better-served by choosing ceiling-mounted fixtures with plastic diffuser lenses? If so, would the effect be substantial?
3. Understanding that doubling the equivalent bulb count would also increase the amount of light, would choosing four-bulb fixtures rather than tandem be overkill - or even yield an uncomfortable amount of light?
4. Are suspended fixtures a better choice for the workshop rather than flush-mount? The workshop portion is only about 10 feet wide, so one set of fixtures down the centerline should be enough to provide even coverage. Here too, would I be better-off with lensed surface mounted fixtures rather than suspended fixtures with reflectors? Would two or four-bulb variants be best?
I know much can be derived from the specs and math but only in relative terms. I'd appreciate any first-hand input from others who've implemented any lighting solutions similar to these for a more subjective perspective before committing.
Many thanks in advance to any and all with insight to contribute.