Can you explain the wiring process to removing the ballast, please? I tried, but was not successful.
Besides what others have suggested already, you need to know what type of LED tubes you have/want to buy. Make sure you get ballast bypass LED tubes. These are the ones that will only work once you cut out the old fluorescent ballast.
There are some LED tubes that are called replacement/retrofit tubes that work with the old fluorescent ballasts but these are not as good. They require the old ballast in order to work, they use more electricity (due to the ballast still being used) and if the old ballast stops working the LED tubes will no longer work and you're back to square one. So get the ballast bypass tubes.
Ballast bypass LED tubes come in several configurations. Some are doubled ended tubes and some are singled ended tubes.
The double ended tubes will have the pins on one end of the tube that get hooked up to the line side (hot) wires and the pins on the other end of the tube that get hooked up to the neutral wires. These are very easy to hook up as all the line side (hot) wires, which are normally black, get hooked up the tombstones on one end of the light fixture and all the neutral side wires, which are normally white, get hooked up to the tombstones on the other end of the fixture. The double ended LED ballast bypass tubes will have markings on them to designate which end of the tube gets attached to the hot side and which end gets attached to the neutral side of the light fixture. This is the type that I have and if you put them in backwards the lights won't light up indicating you have to turn them around.
The single ended tubes will have both the line (hot) and the neutral pins of the tubes on the same end. One pin is hot the other pin is neutral and the tube will be marked as to which is which. The pins on the other end of these tubes are just dummy pins (not connected to anything). These types of tubes require a bit more thinking and care when prepping the light fixture than the double ended type. The tombstones on one end of the light fixture (in a two tube fixture for example) will each have one hot and one neutral wire hooked to them and the tombstones on the other end of the fixture will require the removal of all the wires to them. The end with no wires hooked up to the tombstones is where the dummy pins on the tubes will go. If you put the tubes in wrong they will not light up which means either you need to flip them around or you wired the tombstones wrong and you have to reverse the hot and neutral wires to them. This is why you need to think about which side of each tombstone will get the hot wire and which will get the neutral wire so it matches the pin configuration of the LED tube.
Either type of ballast bypass LED tubes will be a great improvement over the old fluorescent tubes and ballasts. You will get more light, use less electricity and you will get instant on lighting even if your fixtures are in unheated structures that have temperatures that get to below freezing.
Jim