reible
01-31-2009, 01:45 PM
I have began a program of upgrading my garage shop lighting. Since I need to keep costs down and really don't want to have to do any rewiring I have decided to start replacing my old 4' fluorescent with new fixtures and move from the old T12 40 watt bulbs to the newer T8 32 watt bulbs.
I have chosen to go with the daylight 6500K bulbs which I find are a lot more "white" then the shop bulbs that I have been using. I guess I'll get use to it.
The new sets claims to start down to zero. Since my shop is unheated but attached it has never ever come close to being that cold but it does on some especially cold days drop below freezing. Today it is 36 so while not warm enough to do much woodworking I was able to do a bit of the lighting getting up two fixtures with bulbs. If I warm up enough I might do the one remaining fixture I have on hand.
I have a total of 9 fixtures in the garage at this point, I've funded for doing 5 of them this year... one of which will be added at a new location. Then next year I can complete the job.
Power wise I have made a couple of changes that should help, first the fixtures I'm adding have local shutoff so in the cases where the power switch will turn on multiple lights I can now pick which one(s) in the set are on or off. The 9 fixtures are responsible for 720 watts if all on. The new bulbs even with the addition of one more fixture will only need 640.
Not going to pay for itself in a while but then what ever does....
Ed
I have chosen to go with the daylight 6500K bulbs which I find are a lot more "white" then the shop bulbs that I have been using. I guess I'll get use to it.
The new sets claims to start down to zero. Since my shop is unheated but attached it has never ever come close to being that cold but it does on some especially cold days drop below freezing. Today it is 36 so while not warm enough to do much woodworking I was able to do a bit of the lighting getting up two fixtures with bulbs. If I warm up enough I might do the one remaining fixture I have on hand.
I have a total of 9 fixtures in the garage at this point, I've funded for doing 5 of them this year... one of which will be added at a new location. Then next year I can complete the job.
Power wise I have made a couple of changes that should help, first the fixtures I'm adding have local shutoff so in the cases where the power switch will turn on multiple lights I can now pick which one(s) in the set are on or off. The 9 fixtures are responsible for 720 watts if all on. The new bulbs even with the addition of one more fixture will only need 640.
Not going to pay for itself in a while but then what ever does....
Ed