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Recessed lights vs. LED Tubes

tomedkaz

Member
Joined
Mar 16, 2016
Messages
23
Location
Middlesex County, NJ
Hello.

This is my garage thread:
http://www.garagejournal.com/forum/showthread.php?p=5602172#post5602172

The plan is to install 6 recessed lights in a 12x20 garage.
The boxes are IC rated, will be wrapped with ROXUL R23.

Question: Will there be heat loss associated with installing recessed boxes? I absolutely love the look, but worry about letting cold air get in and enter the ceiling, eventually cooling the bedroom upstairs.

What are good options for LED tubes? I want a LOT of light in the garage, since my dream car will be there one day soon.


Thanks in advance!

Tom
 
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Crazyjake8493

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Sep 26, 2014
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Upstate NY
By LED tubes, do you mean replacements for 4' fluorescent tubes? I had a bunch of 2x4 drop-in troffers I got for free, and replaced all my T12 bulbs with the Thinklux ballast-bypass LED tubes from Earthled.com, and I love them. Much better light, no hum, full brightness, instant on. If you already have fixtures with ballasts, you can get direct replacements that work with the ballasts, no rewiring required. The ballast-compatible tubes usually cost more, but are quicker to install. Either way, you can't really go wrong with LED.
 

Showkey

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Aug 9, 2014
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Wausau WI
The LED tube thing has been beat to death.........with HD, Lowes, Sam's, Costco and the off shore eBay stuff to mention a few.

Just scroll down the lighting and find hundreds of posts.
 

TwinCharged RX-7

Active member
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May 30, 2011
Messages
28
I'm on the fence too. I remodeled my house with 6" LED recessed (in IC boxes).

Working on the garage plans now, but kind of want the same recessed lights instead of the typical 4' fixtures. Haven't done the cost variance yet, but regular recessed lights would give a different look to the garage. I'll go LED no matter what though.
 

ddawg16

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Jul 11, 2008
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Location
S. California
Yea....it's been beat up pretty good....but it also goes in cycles....so unless you catch one of the 'cycles', you would have to do some searching to find posts on the subject.

As for me....recessed cans is the best way to go. Total flexibility....I really doubt you will ever see an end to the Edison socket....and the options of bulbs to fit in them. And if cities outlaw them....well...it's real easy to yank out the Edison and put in a GU24.

By going with recessed cans you have a much larger selection of wattage's, shape, color, etc.

I have 18 6" cans arranged in 3 zones in my garage. If I had anything to do different, I would have added more cans in the ceiling where the garage door is. I didn't put any there thinking the door would block the light. I 'overlooked' the fact I spend a lot of nights in there...with the door down.





I have no issues with shadows....

Right now all of the bulbs are CFL's, and the bastards won't die. I have a mix of 2700K, 4000K and 6000K. I prefer the 4000-5000K color range. All are 23w (100w equiv). About halve are PAR bulbs, the others, just bare squirlies....I can't really tell a difference....other than the PAR bulbs look 'cleaner' in the recessed can.
 

scout89402

New member
Joined
Feb 12, 2012
Messages
1
As a guy who's just done this, I have two sides to my shop. One side I have the pretty recessed lights, and the other I have the LED tubes. When it comes to light output there is no question that the tubes do a better job. I'll try to post pictures when I get a chance.


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black00lightning

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Joined
Apr 1, 2014
Messages
228
Location
TX Hill Country
I prefer the look of recessed cans over flourecent fixtures so for my 30 x 32 x 12 workshop, I used 36 6" cans with 100 watt equivalent bulbs. Fits the look i wanted and gives me plenty of light.

Sorry for the pic orientation? ?
 

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Ghoster

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Feb 17, 2016
Messages
7
I did 16 recessed lights in my garage. Right now I am using the cheapo LED bulbs from home depot. I am very happy with the lighting. My plan is to change these bulbs out for the nicer retrofit ones. They are almost double the lumens. I think I may ne d to install dimmers!

image_zpsenisq5da.jpeg
 
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TwinCharged RX-7

Active member
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May 30, 2011
Messages
28
Cans with nice LEDs are way cheaper than those. If the ones in link are $50 each and they are half price of cans with LEDs, that would make cans with LEDs $100, mine were $25, I just did the whole house.
 

ddawg16

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Joined
Jul 11, 2008
Messages
21,005
Location
S. California
While the tubes might have more 'output' vs cans, I have the position that I don't want ALL of my light to be from above.

My garage has more than enough 'general' lighting for me to do 95% of what I need to do.

For that other 5%, you need task lighting. As in under cabinet lighting...lights on the drill press....lights above the radial arm saw, etc.

Additionally, cans give the user a lot more flexibility than tubes. Like, being able to find plenty of bulbs to fit those cans. You are not going to find replacement LED tubes at HD....at least not yet.
 

aar0s

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Joined
Jan 22, 2010
Messages
1,905
Location
So.Il.
Cans with nice LEDs are way cheaper than those. If the ones in link are $50 each and they are half price of cans with LEDs, that would make cans with LEDs $100, mine were $25, I just did the whole house.

I think ours are in the 30 dollar range, iirc it was priced around what a can light with trim ring and an led was priced. Biggest difference is that when you take down the led disk light you have a wired box that gives you other options, with a can light your kinda stuck with it.
 
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tomedkaz

Member
Joined
Mar 16, 2016
Messages
23
Location
Middlesex County, NJ
Went with 4 foot one piece LEDs from HD. 2400 lumens each. Slim design. Super happy with the light output and layout.
Paired it with an occupancy sensor.
Pic of a recent photo. Still need to install floor tiles

f7869e62ca588d58b45bb86f6a836e86.jpg

42e7aa95193b56ad8b37086a3cb5d4a3.jpg


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