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Lighting a 40x75 shop

Bigredford

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Joined
Oct 31, 2018
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193
Location
Hull Ga
The shop side of my build is 40x75 with 17 foot eaves. I've got a bunch of second hand Lithonia IBZT5 6l high bays or very close to that model. 6 bulb t5 high bays. I actually have three up in the shop right now temporary.

Going to do a lot of machine shop work. How many of these high bays should I put in?
 
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13mo

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Mar 10, 2020
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78
Location
Missouri
The shop side of my build is 40x75 with 17 foot eaves. I've got a bunch of second hand Lithonia IBZT5 6l high bays or very close to that model. 6 bulb t5 high bays. I actually have three up in the shop right now temporary.

Going to do a lot of machine shop work. How many of these high bays should I put in?

It depends on how well lit you want the shop. Fortunately, if you know how well lit the shop needs to be, Acuity has a free tool (https://www.visual-3d.com/tools/interior/) where you can select their products such as the IBZ and determine this.

If we assume the typically recommended 93 foot candles, a typical open rafter, open pole/stud/beam building, the fixtures hung 18" below the bottom chord, and that the T5HO 6-lamp IBZ is the standard distribution IBZ 654 (there are actually several different variations), you will need 15 fixtures spaced 15' by 13' 4' apart to give 92 fc. The 6-lamp T5HO fixture you would need the most of would be the IBZ 654 WDU ACL, you would need 18 as these have a lot of uplight.

36-40 of these would be overwhelmingly bright, that number of fixtures would be more appropriate to a light with much less output such as a 4 lamp T8 fixture such as the IBZ 432.
 
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Bigredford

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Joined
Oct 31, 2018
Messages
193
Location
Hull Ga
That points me in a good direction. After I got the roof on my building I temporarily hung three high bays in the shop. I'm not exactly sure on the model number but I got more then enough high bays to hang. This style with the plexiglass lenses and more I beam open type.
 

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13mo

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Mar 10, 2020
Messages
78
Location
Missouri
If you already have a large number of these fixtures, you can always delamp (not put in all of the bulbs it can fit.) These fixtures will have 2 ballasts, and generally they are a four-bulb and a two-bulb or two 3-bulb ballasts. If you only connect power to one ballast and only connect the bulbs to the ballast with power, you end up with a fixture with lower output that you can use more of. For example, if you only install four of the six lamps (if you have one four-bulb and one two-bulb ballast and don't hook up the two-bulb ballast), you would use 21 fixtures instead of 15 to hit 93 fc, and you would use 30 if you only install three bulbs (if you have the two 3-bulb ballasts and only connect one.)
 

dcg9381

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Joined
Jun 20, 2018
Messages
11,778
Location
Austin, TX
I'd consider round UFO-type lights. I think you'll get away with a lot fewer lights and they just work great with 16-17' ceilings.
 
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