PDA

View Full Version : Fluorescent lighting Replacement Shop



Carroll Courtney
12-28-2014, 7:58 AM
Guys,another one of my 20yr old fluorescent lights have bit the dust.I have 12-4' light fixtures and now 4 of them is out.I replace the bulbs,check the sockets but no cigar.Off to my local HD for a new ballast.OUCH! dang 48.00 for a ballast?While there I look at other fixtures and there is afew choices,but which one?What bulb buts out the most light for someone who can't see that good in sun light?
Guys I have 8' ceilings and its time for replacement of the fixtures so what have others gone with to get the most for the buck?Not going down and purchase 12 of them but maybe one per pay check,or does someone know of a source on the net that's cheaper than the local HD or Lowes?Happy New Years----Carroll

roger wiegand
12-28-2014, 9:45 AM
I used the T5HO fixtures with the diffuser cover in my shop and they are great. You probably won't like the total price, but the bulbs are rated for a very long life and the light quantity and quality is a relief to my old eyes. (the covers do help with the glare and they give me another target for whacking with a board besides those expensive bulbs).

http://www.homedepot.com/p/Lithonia-Lighting-2-Light-High-Output-Multi-Volt-T5-Fluorescent-White-Wraparound-LB-2-54T5HO-MVOLT-MVPS/203124228

Carroll Courtney
12-28-2014, 10:49 AM
I do have a gift card,so the first one will be kinda free----lol

Don Jarvie
12-28-2014, 11:15 AM
I suggest the Lithonia T8 Model 3348 at HD. They are around 20 bucks a piece. Mine have lasted 6 years and counting. I had to replace 2 of them lately, but the price is very reasonable if you need more than a few.

Jim Andrew
12-28-2014, 1:23 PM
You might check Ebay for replacement ballasts. I bought a box, for much less than at lowes or Menards.

Curt Harms
12-29-2014, 7:58 AM
You might check Ebay for replacement ballasts. I bought a box, for much less than at lowes or Menards.

That would be my thought, check into alternative ballasts. I bought a few replacement ballasts at one of the borgs. Here's one example that works with T8 tubes which I wanted. Some ballasts are rated for either T12 or T8 tubes.

http://www.homedepot.com/p/GE-120-Volt-Electronic-Ballast-for-4-ft-2-Lamp-T8-Fixture-71037/100632123
$14.99

Malcolm Schweizer
12-29-2014, 8:33 AM
This won't be a cheaper alternative, but I have converted all my lighting to LED, and love it. Just make sure you get the warm white, because the "bright" white and "daylight" are hideous blue-white. The warm white is very nice- just like an incandescent bulb. Look for something in the range of 2700 kelvin. I've saved a ton of money converting to LED's but I live in a place with the second highest electricity rates in the world, so for me the savings are quicker to see.

Carroll Courtney
12-29-2014, 11:47 AM
Guys thanks for all the wonderful ideals from light replacement to ballast replacement.This post has open up alot of choices that I did not think about from LED's,T12,T8,T5,T5HO.Today off to HD to look again,then to ebay to check there also.Thanks Carroll
Poot,if my eyes would wonder around alittle I would have seen the sticky note on lighting at the top in this section

allan kuntz
12-29-2014, 7:48 PM
just put nine of these in my shop. Very easy to instal
http://www.homedepot.ca/product/4-ft-t8-4l-32w-grid-shop-light/825098

John Sanford
12-30-2014, 3:21 AM
When looking at LEDs, be aware that Costco has a well regarded (by the guys over at Garage Journal) 4' LED shop fixture for $40, which is 50-60% the cost of equivalent fixtures from Home Depot or Lowes.

Carroll Courtney
12-30-2014, 8:29 AM
John,thank you for posting.Do you have a number on the fixture that I could google?I went to costco website and did not find the LED fixture.There's a Costco about 30mins away so just wanted to find some info----Carroll

Alex Stace
12-30-2014, 9:41 AM
is there any real reason not to use a bunch of ceramic sockets and regular lighbulbs? to many shadow angles or something?

Ole Anderson
12-31-2014, 1:06 AM
is there any real reason not to use a bunch of ceramic sockets and regular lighbulbs? to many shadow angles or something?
Getting harder to find incandescent bulbs, they use 5 times a much juice as a fluorescent for the same light, they break easier than a fluorescent and when they do you have 110 volts exposed in the broken filaments, they will hang down farther than a fluorescent, bulb life is a small fraction of a fluorescent.

george newbury
12-31-2014, 7:12 AM
I used the T5HO fixtures with the diffuser cover in my shop and they are great. You probably won't like the total price, but the bulbs are rated for a very long life and the light quantity and quality is a relief to my old eyes. (the covers do help with the glare and they give me another target for whacking with a board besides those expensive bulbs).

http://www.homedepot.com/p/Lithonia-Lighting-2-Light-High-Output-Multi-Volt-T5-Fluorescent-White-Wraparound-LB-2-54T5HO-MVOLT-MVPS/203124228

Double check the T5HO to make sure they are not TOO bright for your application. I bought one of the 2 bulb fixtures w/o diffuser and found it too bright for my basement shop. However a 4 bulb T5HO unit w/o diffuser hung at about 10' is bright but useable in my warehouse shop.

Alex Stace
12-31-2014, 7:29 AM
Getting harder to find incandescent bulbs, they use 5 times a much juice as a fluorescent for the same light, they break easier than a fluorescent and when they do you have 110 volts exposed in the broken filaments, they will hang down farther than a fluorescent, bulb life is a small fraction of a fluorescent.


Well yeah I would use LEDs or CFLs in em, but cost is about 3 bucks a piece per fixture vs 20+

Curt Harms
12-31-2014, 9:31 AM
Well yeah I would use LEDs or CFLs in em, but cost is about 3 bucks a piece per fixture vs 20+

I haven't done the math but LED bulbs seem like an interesting alternative to fluorescent. Benefits of LED over fluorescent I think:

- Life is not reduced by frequent on/off cycles. This is an issue for me with a basement shop. I may turn the lights off/on several times a day some days.

- I don't know that light output decreases with age as it does with fluorescent

- No need for the lamps to warm up in cold locations for light output to reach normal.

David Ragan
12-31-2014, 9:32 AM
My electrician friend says that he never replaces the ballast. He is right. Too much trouble. Now, i replace the entire fixture.

And, several years ago, I read that incandescent bulbs burn out from time that they are lit.

However, fluorescent bulbs burn out from the on/off cycle. Seems to be the case. If anyone know diffo pls advise.

Frank Pratt
12-31-2014, 1:32 PM
If you have any need to compare stains or paints for color matching or just for general color accuracy then you want to pay attention to the color rendering index (CRI) of the light source you choose.

Cheaper LEDs can be pretty horrible as are standard fluorescent lamps. A CRI of over 90 is what you want. You'll probably have to go to the manufacturer's website to get that info. If it's not available, then you can assume that it's low.

Ole Anderson
12-31-2014, 5:54 PM
Well yeah I would use LEDs or CFLs in em, but cost is about 3 bucks a piece per fixture vs 20+

Yes, the short term cost will bite you, but long term you are way further ahead to go LED or CFL, just read their packaging. Often a 2 or 3 year payback, depending on how many hours per week they are turned on.

Frank Pratt
12-31-2014, 10:26 PM
Curt : LEDs do, in fact get dimmer with age. They don't actually burn out (except for occasional random failures) they gradually get dimmer. An LED's life rating of, say 50,000 hours, means that at that point it will put out 70% of the lumens that it did when new. Some of the dodgy makers will use a 50% figure, or none at all.

Curt Harms
01-01-2015, 8:41 AM
Curt : LEDs do, in fact get dimmer with age. They don't actually burn out (except for occasional random failures) they gradually get dimmer. An LED's life rating of, say 50,000 hours, means that at that point it will put out 70% of the lumens that it did when new. Some of the dodgy makers will use a 50% figure, or none at all.

Thanks. I'm not surprised but still prefer them over CFLs if the $ are within reason. For accurate color, would separately switched halogens make sense? Use the cooler, cheaper running, longer lasting LED/CFL most of the time and halogens when working with colors? You may not need double lights throughout the entire space, just the finishing area. As I understand it the CRI of halogen bulbs is 100.

Jim Andrew
01-01-2015, 7:08 PM
I have a few halogen lights in my shop, but avoid using them for long periods because of the heat they produce.

Curt Harms
01-02-2015, 7:38 AM
I have a few halogen lights in my shop, but avoid using them for long periods because of the heat they produce.

This time of year in the north country that's not a bad thing but yeah. I seem to recall that the majority of energy put into an incandescent or halogen bulb creates heat, light is a useful byproduct.

John Sanford
01-02-2015, 10:50 PM
This time of year in the north country that's not a bad thing but yeah. I seem to recall that the majority of energy put into an incandescent or halogen bulb creates heat, light is a useful byproduct. That was the thinking behind the original E-Z-Bake Oven. :D

Chris Garratt
01-02-2015, 10:56 PM
I went to a bunch of plastic screw in bases with 26 watt cfl bulbs. even illumination and when I attack them with a board, I don't complain (low ceilings) I wired them with a pigtail that plugs into a switch operated outlet. No permanent wire changes that way.

Jerome Hanby
01-06-2015, 2:08 PM
I bought a bunch of old 4 bulb T12 fxtures for next to nothing off of craigslist, found a big bag of replacement sockets (figured if i was stripping down all these lights might as well have new sockets) off ebay for $10, and bought these (http://www.homedepot.com/p/Philips-Advance-Optanium-32-Watt-4-Lamp-PRO-PACK-T8-4FT-Instant-Start-Electronic-Fluorescent-Replacement-Ballast-498428/204080081?N=5yc1vZc7nxZ12l2) 4 packs of 4 bulb T8 ballasts from HD for about $55 a pack.

David Castor
01-06-2015, 2:33 PM
With an 8 foot ceiling height, T5HO may be too bright. You end up with a wide ratio of bright to dark. T8 fluorescents are probably going to be the most economical option - both initial and operating cost. There is a lot of information (and opinions) on shop lighting in the archives and elsewhere online.

roger wiegand
01-06-2015, 5:14 PM
With an 8 foot ceiling height, T5HO may be too bright. You end up with a wide ratio of bright to dark. T8 fluorescents are probably going to be the most economical option - both initial and operating cost. There is a lot of information (and opinions) on shop lighting in the archives and elsewhere online.

I've got 9 of them (T5HO two bulb with diffuser) on ~10 ft spacing (5-6 ft out from the walls) in a 34x36' space with about an 8'8" height. The corners are a little dark, but across the rest of the space the lighting seems very uniform (I think the diffusers help a lot with this, the bare bulb fixtures are hard to look at.) People remark on how bright the shop is, but its definitely not too bright for me (but then I'm old). I have two more fixtures to add over my two benches that are positioned in the corners of the space. I also have a track light with three halogen spot lights over the lathe, plus an intensely bright gooseneck surgical lamp for detail lighting on the lathe. I've found I need a lot more light as I get older.

T8's are definitely cheaper to buy, but you need twice as many of them to achieve the same initial brightness. Lumens per watt and lifetimes are roughly the same.

Lee Reep
01-06-2015, 6:00 PM
This won't be a cheaper alternative, but I have converted all my lighting to LED, and love it. Just make sure you get the warm white, because the "bright" white and "daylight" are hideous blue-white. The warm white is very nice- just like an incandescent bulb. Look for something in the range of 2700 kelvin. I've saved a ton of money converting to LED's but I live in a place with the second highest electricity rates in the world, so for me the savings are quicker to see.

Remember, there are always two opinions (actually a lot more, when it comes to lighting.) :) I worked for an LED company for a couple years and Daylight were the most popular when people saw all the choices. Warm white were popular for blending into mixed lighting environments, where incandescents were still in use.

Personally, I absolutely hate warm white, and put in Daylight LEDs (5000K), in home and shop. For me, I perceive them as brighter, and I would not consider the newest Daylight LEDs to be blue-white. But that is me.

I'd recommend going to Home Depot and look at the displays of each color temperature. Only you can decide which is best for you. I still have some T8 troffers in the shop, and put Daylight tubes in to complement the LEDs. Mixing cool white fluorescents and daylight LEDs just bugged me. The LED tubes for flourescent fixtures are still pretty pricey, so mixing the two is not a bad choice.

Regardless of your preference for color temperature, there really is no reason to not start the conversion to LED. The bulbs consume less power, and last very long. I've also got some great deals on non-dimmable LED bulbs recently. Some places I guess don't want to continue carrying them when prices for dimmable versions aren't too much more. I see no reason to have "mood" lighting in my shop, so non-dimmable works for me. :)

Jack Lemley
01-07-2015, 8:52 AM
+1 Lithonia, and added the T8 daylight bulbs. I replaced all in my shop over a couple of years as the old ones went out. Built shop 25+ years ago so got plenty of use out of the original fixtures.

Jack


I suggest the Lithonia T8 Model 3348 at HD. They are around 20 bucks a piece. Mine have lasted 6 years and counting. I had to replace 2 of them lately, but the price is very reasonable if you need more than a few.

Tom Clark FL
01-07-2015, 10:25 AM
One more vote for eliminating the fluorescents. Sick of ballast problems. After 20 years with 50 fixtures in my machine shop and 15 more years in a home workshop, the newest shop only has four of them, and they are only turned on when they are needed to light a broad area. The light switch in the new shop turns on four of the new 28w bulbs in reflectors. Work areas are brightly lit with daylight fluorescents curly bulbs - yes - unlike some here, I love them in my work areas and on over my workbenches. since I am in the shop by myself, I see no use in wasting electricity brightly lighting the other corners where I am not. But then my shop is 1300 sq ft. Photo is of my model corner. Notice reflectors over assembly table. The bright light makes me see like a kid again! I wire the lights over each workbench into one on-off switch for convince.

Carroll Courtney
01-07-2015, 7:29 PM
Guys I choose the T8 32w fixture which was purchase at a electrical supply house for 59.00 plus 3.00ea needing 4 bulbs.Its the Cooper brand so maybe these will last as long as my old T12 fixtures which was over 20yrs.Thanks for all the suggestions,just working within my budget-----Carroll