LutzTD
Well-known member
most likely future is houses and garages will be wired for dc lights with a central control, so even the edison socket may be doomed
It seems to me that a lot of us are pulling this whole " 100 lumens per sq. ft." idea from online sources and not considering what is done in one guys garage. That level of lighting results in about 1000 lux which is what is recommended for hospital operating rooms. 1000 lux is also close to being outdoors on an overcast day. Is that much light needed on every sq. ft. of a garage?
Roger that. Lumens / square foot is a nonsense guideline.My experience with Costco LEDs is that you don't need 100 lumens per SF. Mine is half that (43 lumens/SF) and is bright as daylight.
I know....but we can only hope.....Yup. I gave up pointing that out a year or so ago.
Not as bright now, is it? Same lumens...same square footage.
another consideration for the bottom dollar. If you have the space and dont mind troffer lights, they can be had for pennies on the dollar on the used market. I bought 37 4 bulb t5ho fixtures with diffusers for $250. I few of the diffusers and frames were broken during transit, but I got all of the bulbs as well. My net was 35 complete assemblies and 2 with no covers. Thats $6.75 each. and with a wipe down they are brand new........
Unless you're talking a highly coherent light source (think laser), it's not the same square footage. You are also lighting ~4x as much vertical wall space. Most guides I have seen either take ceiling height into consideration, or assume a common, standard height.
It was an example for those folks in this forum that dont understand lighting and use a rule of thumb like lumens per square foot. Not intended to start a debate on photometrics.
CD
Since people are coming here for advice and to up their knowledge, seems like it would be doing a better service to explain that lumens at the source don't directly translate into lumens at the surface, and why, rather than calling it BS.
Welcome 4 FN 27. Please define size of space LxWxH, Fixture Qty., and link to actual fixture used.LED all the way...I love mine. Did the entire build inside and out with LEDS except for the Utility Room and Bathroom. Utility room has T-8's and the bathroom has a restored warehouse fixture.
This is kind of my dilemma. I have 10 of these lights that were given to me, came out of an Economy rental car building. I just finished a 24x32' build with 10-12' ceilings, and cant decide whether to use them or not. On one hand they were free, but the other, i dont want to run into cold start issues, or dead/dying ballasts, etc. I have plenty of the bulbs, just not sure what to do.
Welcome 4 FN 27. Please define size of space LxWxH, Fixture Qty., and link to actual fixture used.
Wow, almost 9000 sq ft! That's some serious square footage you got there80 x 72 5 rows of 5 fixtures in the storage area. The Car Shop and Machine Shop areas are 40 x 40 and each have 9 fixtures. I'll have to get the link in the morning. The hight of the 3 areas is 16 clear
. There aren't many here who have a full compliment of LED fixtures like you do. From a few quick mock ups, you have 65fc avg in the storage area and 70fc avg in the shop areas. Lumen output of the fixtures is right where it should be for your ceiling height. Well done. Wow, almost 9000 sq ft! That's some serious square footage you got there. There aren't many here who have a full compliment of LED fixtures like you do. From a few quick mock ups, you have 65fc avg in the storage area and 70fc avg in the shop areas. Lumen output of the fixtures is right where it should be for your ceiling height. Well done.
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most likely future is houses and garages will be wired for dc lights with a central control, so even the edison socket may be doomed