I would suggest a 4-foot 'daylight' fluorescent tube fixture for general lighting, then a dental light, on a custom bracket, for 'spot' lighting. But that is just me...
I really like the idea of a used/surplus dental lamp for occasional super-fine detail work, if the cost is not outrageous; but I'd still install a full complement of fluorescents (or
maybe LEDs) for general-purpose workbench illumination.
2ManyProjects - Thanks. The frame work for my bench is a pallet rack. Very simple to build and very strong.
Hmmm... I just went back to take a second look at that, and your pic has disappeared.
In any event...
The slat wall does not have aluminum channels and I haven't had any problems with it. Most of the brackets are the proper ones for slat wall. A few are from similar systems and they work well to. I don't have anything that is very heavy on it but I think it could probably stand up to some more weight.
Good to know. Thanks.
Whatever you get, make sure that it uses "4 ft" bulbs. Don't waste your time with 8 ft bulbs. If you want 8 ft fixtures, get ones that use 4 bulbs in tandem two and two. 8 ft bulbs are difficult to transport, and handle, and not easily found for a good price. 4 footers are cheap and easily found in all brilliances and color rendering.
Agreed, in spades.
Wow. Thanks for all the info!
Above the tool box is about 9' and above the work bench is 8' 1 1/2".
So I guess I should go with my first thought of running 2 8' doubles.
I thought I saw some negativity on this board that they were being fazed out and used too much energy?
There seems to be some confusion here. You can get 8-foot fixtures which take standard 4-foot T8 (or even T5) bulbs, typically four of them, in two rows. Those tubes (& fixtures) are NOT "being phased out", and are WELL within the realm of "energy-efficient" as such things go.
That is the route both Charles and I are STRONGLY recommending,
IF you don't want to "bother" with individual 4-foot fixtures (which still offer some benefits; so don't completely rule them out just yet).
What you do NOT want are fixtures which require 8-foot tubes, for all sorts of reasons, including energy efficiency, economics, and long-term availability.
Why are my pics so small?
No idea, beyond that's the size images you are uploading. What sort of camera are you using to take them, and what exactly are you doing to them in post-processing?
Thanks Charles. My iphone pics work on other forums. Maybe i should open open them in photoshop and save them as pdfs larger?
No,
NOT PDFs! That isn't even an image/graphics format (tho' PDFs can contain embedded images created in other formats). You near-certainly want to use JPEG for anything you upload here (or elsewhere on the web). Other potential choices include .PNG ("Portable Network Graphics") and .SVG ("Scalable Vector Graphics"); but neither of these has anywhere near the broad-based support that JPEG does.