Iggy913
New member
Ladies and Gentleman,
I'm almost finished with a 36x36 shop next to my home, this was a long awaited dream of mine that is finally a reality. I had a few questions on lighting that I'm hopeful for some answers/advice on:
The shop is a square at the 36' dimensions I mentioned above. I have an 18'x9' door centered on the front with two 3'x5' windows along each wall, each window mounted about three feet from the corner and about three feet off the floor. The ceilings are 10' high for the first four feet on the sides, then go up at a sharp angle to 14' high across the middle 18' of the shop. This was done so I can install an automotive lift. Picture a vaulted ceiling.
Using some of the online formulas to achieve a good lighting scheme, I was going with 100 foot candles per square foot x 1300 square feet gives me 130,000 lumens, does that seem right?
I was originally looking at Barrina LED lights off Amazon, they are 8ft LEDs with 8500 lumens each, by the math I would need about 16 of these fixtures to achieve the 130,000 lumen rating the calculation states.
First off does anyone have any experience with these lights, they are awfully cheap, however appear to get very good reviews? I can't post a link to them as I'm a new member, but if you search "Barrina LED Shop Lights" you'll see what I'm referring to.
Secondly with the higher 14' ceilings and I going to lose more light and require additional fixtures?
I was initially going to buy two of the 10 packs which should give me about 170,000 lumens of light.
For layout, I was thinking of making three runs across the higher part of the ceiling which measures out to be 18'x36' with each run consisting of four of the 8ft tubes and each run about 4.5' apart. This would utilize 12 of the 20 fixtures. For the remaining 8 I was going to space them evenly around the lower 10' ceiling, which would give me two on each side.
I had also planned to run multiple switches in case this was too bright, and/or I don't mind buying more at this price point if I need it.
Sorry for the long post, just excited and want to make this right the first time.
I'm almost finished with a 36x36 shop next to my home, this was a long awaited dream of mine that is finally a reality. I had a few questions on lighting that I'm hopeful for some answers/advice on:
The shop is a square at the 36' dimensions I mentioned above. I have an 18'x9' door centered on the front with two 3'x5' windows along each wall, each window mounted about three feet from the corner and about three feet off the floor. The ceilings are 10' high for the first four feet on the sides, then go up at a sharp angle to 14' high across the middle 18' of the shop. This was done so I can install an automotive lift. Picture a vaulted ceiling.
Using some of the online formulas to achieve a good lighting scheme, I was going with 100 foot candles per square foot x 1300 square feet gives me 130,000 lumens, does that seem right?
I was originally looking at Barrina LED lights off Amazon, they are 8ft LEDs with 8500 lumens each, by the math I would need about 16 of these fixtures to achieve the 130,000 lumen rating the calculation states.
First off does anyone have any experience with these lights, they are awfully cheap, however appear to get very good reviews? I can't post a link to them as I'm a new member, but if you search "Barrina LED Shop Lights" you'll see what I'm referring to.
Secondly with the higher 14' ceilings and I going to lose more light and require additional fixtures?
I was initially going to buy two of the 10 packs which should give me about 170,000 lumens of light.
For layout, I was thinking of making three runs across the higher part of the ceiling which measures out to be 18'x36' with each run consisting of four of the 8ft tubes and each run about 4.5' apart. This would utilize 12 of the 20 fixtures. For the remaining 8 I was going to space them evenly around the lower 10' ceiling, which would give me two on each side.
I had also planned to run multiple switches in case this was too bright, and/or I don't mind buying more at this price point if I need it.
Sorry for the long post, just excited and want to make this right the first time.