To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

Lights in the floor

Lost Drive In

New member
Joined
Feb 25, 2005
Messages
3
Location
Pennsylvania
Great Site!

I'm designing my new garge now, I plan to break ground in the spring.

A few years ago I was in a shop that had lights in the floor, pointing up. I intend to do the same. I've designed a light box that I can make, but if I can buy these I'd rather not go to the hassle. Anybody have a source for in-floor lights?

Thanks!

:thumbup:
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

ranger_dood

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 22, 2005
Messages
1,237
Location
Pennsylvania
Wow... that could be the end of crawling under my truck with a drop light... Cool! Never seen this done before..,.

Where are you located in PA, just out of curiosity.
 

TOO Z MAXX

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 6, 2005
Messages
54
Location
Stockton, Ca.
That would be cool. The fixture would have to be very strong. I have never seen it in a garage but I did a lighting job using marble tiles and the lights shined through from the bottom. Looked very cool
 
OP
L

Lost Drive In

New member
Joined
Feb 25, 2005
Messages
3
Location
Pennsylvania
I'm in Southeast PA, near Allentown.

I plan to use 1" thick Lexan for the lenses, making them at work is no sweat. I have some small 9 watt Fluorescent outdoor fixtures that I can adapt the lenses to. I considered Halogens but I think they'll get to hot. I want them fully sealed against moisture.

;)
 

OI812

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 8, 2005
Messages
202
If someone finds a link on the web please post it here. This is an absoultly great idea.
 

Luckydevil

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 1, 2005
Messages
1,469
Location
Tampa
I found these.

http://www.hightechlighting.com/index.php/cPath/50_157

Not cheap, but supposedly they are pretty strong.

Square-floor-brick-lamp.jpg



sth_LVE-DG-C01W.jpg

$284.50 for the white brick light.

Voltage: 24V
Amps: 218mA
Watts: 5.2W
LEDs: 72
Extrusion Size: L7.87×D7.87×H2.17 (inches)
Protection Grade: IP65
 

Concrete Video

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 24, 2005
Messages
52
Location
Ohio
It may be easier to come up with ideas if we knew the intended purpose. If it's just to light the underside of a car, you could use led strips about 3' wide and straddle them with the car (kinda like avoiding the hole in the floor at an oil change joint I guess)

If it's cosmetic then you'd need something strong. I'd probably put pieces of pipe into the concrete and recess a light into it with the thick lexan lenses you were talking about. This would work well with a racedeck type floor. The lexan could sit atop the concrete inside of a hole in the tiles. If the lexan was frosted, it should light pretty evenly even with a round light underneath.
 

ultgar

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 11, 2005
Messages
1,118
Location
New Jersey
If you're not using fiberoptics, make sure your fixtures are rated IP67 or better. There are some nice PL equipped in-ground landscape lights that would work well in this application.

Its actually a good idea which I didn't think of 3 years ago when I was pouring my own garage workshop floor. SD
 

Wile1Coyote

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 21, 2005
Messages
433
Location
Motown USA
Richard Griot just did this in his Dream garage. I saw pics of it in mY Haggerty Insurance newsletter of all places. I think he used pool lights!
 
OP
L

Lost Drive In

New member
Joined
Feb 25, 2005
Messages
3
Location
Pennsylvania
My intention is to light the underside of the cars while I work on or clean them, on or off of the lift (yeah, I'm putting a lift in).

I hadn't thought of pool lights, I have to look at some of those.

The lights in the link seem pretty pricey, ambient lighting isn't really my aim.

Thanks!

:thumbup:
 
OP
L

Lost Drive In

New member
Joined
Feb 25, 2005
Messages
3
Location
Pennsylvania
My intention is to light the underside of the cars while I work on or clean them, on or off of the lift (yeah, I'm putting a lift in).

I hadn't thought of pool lights, I have to look at some of those.

The lights in the link seem pretty pricey, ambient lighting isn't really my aim.

Thanks!

:thumbup:
 

ConstructionBoss

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 24, 2005
Messages
78
Location
Keller, TX
You really wouldn't want to use a pool light. Those are 300 Watt+ bulbs that rely on the water in the pool to keep them cool. While remodeling my pool this winter, I read somewhere that you should not turn on the light until the water is in the pool pecause you can burn out the bulb really fast.
 

ultgar

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 11, 2005
Messages
1,118
Location
New Jersey
Luckydevil said:
Steve- what do the IP ratings mean?


IP is "ingress protection" . Essentially how well the fixture is protected against exposure to solids & liquids. The first digit (0 thru 6) indicates protection against solids like dirt/dust and other objects. The 2nd digit (0 thru 8) is protection against liquids. The higher the rating, the better.

An IP67 has total seal protection against dust and is protected against short term immersion in liquids up to 1m deep. For pond and pool lighting, an IP68 offers better long term seal protection against immersion in liquids.

SD
 

wythors

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 23, 2005
Messages
1,086
Location
Pacific Northwest
Wile1Coyote said:
Richard Griot just did this in his Dream garage. I saw pics of it in mY Haggerty Insurance newsletter of all places. I think he used pool lights!

His catalogs always have pictures of it somewhere in them. Looks really cool.
 

dkn1997

Member
Joined
Jan 17, 2005
Messages
17
Location
Coram, NY
I build and repair inground pools for a living. I would not use a halogen pool light for the aforementioned heat issue. but, many older style lights, like the hayward astrolite in the previous link, use bulbs that screw in like traditional light bulbs. Yes, they can be 300w or even 500!! but you could screw a much lower watt bulb into them and it would probably live.

the nice thing about pool lights for this is that you can choose steel, or plastic for the niche. also, there is already a provision to run a conduit into it. plastic niches have glue in sockets for the conduit and steel have threaded holes for the conduit.

now, I don't know if a pool light will stand up to being driven over. the glass is very thick, at least 1/4" and the rest of the actual light is stainless steel (the rim is thick also) I suppose if you recessed it into the floor enough, it could work.

another positive is that the light itself is sealed very well, so no moisture is going to get in it and if you spill something on it, it won't get into the actual bulb.

another down side is the expense. usually a pool light will run you at least 150 bucks.
 

ultgar

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 11, 2005
Messages
1,118
Location
New Jersey
The landscape in-ground lights I mentioned earlier use compact fluorescent (PL) bulbs. They are rated for exposure to moisture and dirt and give a fair amount of light using very little wattage. Six would be appropriate for under the lift.

Fiberoptic is another safe and "cool" option but can get a little expensive to do it properly. Hopefully prices will continue to drop as fiber competes with LED technology. SD
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

avsfan733

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 22, 2005
Messages
65
Location
Rochester
only problem i see with actual in ground lighting is that you'll be standing in between what you want to light and what your trying to light...perhaps a better solution would be to mount somethign on the insie edges of the lift (assuming four post) that is angled upwards with a diffusion lense... http://www.ledtronics.com/ds/stp527/ or http://www.ledtronics.com/ds/STP306C/default.asp somethign like that? maybe rig up a microswitch and a relay so it turns on at a specific heitgh...plus led's would be better being longer lasting...the problem with the inground would be when the light goes out you gotta change it
 

Double Venom

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 31, 2005
Messages
96
Location
Pentwater, Mi
I have seen those light strips mentioned above, never gave them a thought for the lift! Amazing idea and no glare, but the cost to do a lift would definately fal into the pricey range! Oh-well, what isn't?
DV
 

avsfan733

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 22, 2005
Messages
65
Location
Rochester
well say a lift is what 15ft x 8 ft? thats 180" x 96" which would require around 25 strips which means your talking about $700 so ya i guess it would be but on the other hand it replaces drop lights, and cords, and may even reduce the amount of overhead lighting you would need...guess its always a tradeoff huh maybe not run them all the way around....only on the sides? then your talking only like 450 which really isn't that bad compared to everything else

if you were really confident in your parking ability just build an enclosed flourescent fixture on the inside of each rail...probably only need a small one on the left and one on the right...just a though
 

ConstructionBoss

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 24, 2005
Messages
78
Location
Keller, TX
Hmm..got me thinking....I believe they make a white neon kit that is used for mounting under the car (South Beach Style :cool: ) they run on 12 volts and with a voltage converter could be mounted to the hoist . These neon if I remember correctly from my Circuit City days is in a protective tube that helps keep the neon tube from breaking. I believe they stayed pretty cool as well. A kit with 2 four footers and two three footers usually are about $100. I just checked out on ebay and this guy has a kit for about $45 http://cgi.ebay.com/ebaymotors/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&rd=1&item=7959090963&category=33714

Just thinking outside the box again.
 

VPRKLR

Member
Joined
Jan 9, 2005
Messages
14
Location
Gilroy, Ca
You also need to remember that as soon as you step on or put something over a light your going to have a dark spot or shadow where your hands are. The better quality landscape companies(SPJ, Focus & Lumie) make inground fixtures you can drive over. Or you can go with comercial fixtures and lamp them down.
 

VPRKLR

Member
Joined
Jan 9, 2005
Messages
14
Location
Gilroy, Ca
You need to use a fixture that is rated for vehicles to drive over, a pool light is not. Also a PL9 is not going to give much light, I would use at least a PL18 lamp.
Just my .002 worth :bounce:
 

ersatzs2

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 9, 2006
Messages
630
Location
Mercer County, New Jersey
Anybody ever wind up trying something like this? It looks pretty interesting but I'd rather not be the pioneer. Getting ready to pour the floor and getting paranoid about things I should do before it's, well, cast in concrete. I like the idea of backlighting the entire underbody of the car while it is up on the lift...
 

Tom

Active member
Joined
Jan 14, 2005
Messages
25
Location
SW Wisc.
Why worry about whether they can be driven over? I would place them near the centerline of the car where the tires aren't.
 

ersatzs2

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 9, 2006
Messages
630
Location
Mercer County, New Jersey
Tom said:
Why worry about whether they can be driven over? I would place them near the centerline of the car where the tires aren't.

Yes, but they will still have to stand up to lots of weight and impact, eg loaded hydraulic tables lowering stuff from a car on the lift, a dropped wrench or brake rotor, floor jacks etc.

This just seems like a pretty cool idea, easy to do prior to pouring floor and impossible to do afterwards; I'm surprised no one has done it...
 

'29MurrayTub

Member
Joined
Jun 2, 2006
Messages
8
If you made them flash in different colors you could rent it out as a retro dance floor. One word: DISCO!
 

JohnZ

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 28, 2005
Messages
475
Location
Washington, Michigan
In assembly plants where we had an overhead line with the bottom of the car 6' off the floor, we had continuous fluorescent fixtures inverted in a 10" or 12"-wide "trench" in the floor, with 3/8" or 1/2" thick Plexiglas over them, screwed down along the edges, flush with the finished floor surface. :thumbup:
 

DAMONE

New member
Joined
Aug 28, 2006
Messages
3
I ordered the lights from ccl-light, I got them in a 35 deg. angle light. I will post pics when I get them
 

Randy Forbes

Active member
Joined
Oct 20, 2005
Messages
40
Location
SWFL
I ordered the lights from ccl-light, I got them in a 35 deg. angle light. I will post pics when I get them
Does anyone have any updates on this subject? If all goes as planned, I'll be doing the electrical installation in a house being built for us around Sarasota.

I'd like to include infloor lighting under a 2-post lift while doing the rest of the stub-ups prior to "the pour".

Thanks in advance :thumbup:

Randy
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!
Top Bottom