WELCOME TO RIVER DAVES PLACE

Workshop lighting - What works the best?

Markus

Well-Known Member
Joined
Aug 3, 2022
Messages
637
Reaction score
769
I am having a garage built for the 28 Skater.

Since I will work on the boat in there, I will need good lighting.

What are the things to think about when installing lights in a workshop?

E.g. "Put lights both in the ceiling and high and low on the walls so that you always have good lighting no matter what you do", or "Don't bother with anything fancy. You need portable lights anyway to see what you are doing"

All experience welcome!
 

Markus

Well-Known Member
Joined
Aug 3, 2022
Messages
637
Reaction score
769
IMG_1705.jpeg



IMG_1711.jpeg
 

ltbaney1

Well-Known Member
Joined
Oct 10, 2012
Messages
3,220
Reaction score
6,199
i always preferred high bay lights for general light and having "task" lights where needed. wall, ceiling, floor color and finish will play into this as well. the way light reflects or absorbed can affect it.
 

hallett21

Well-Known Member
Joined
Nov 9, 2010
Messages
18,392
Reaction score
23,722
Personally I like 6” LED cans on dimmers for that scenario. 4 rows of lights with the inside lights on one dimmer and the outside on the other. Halo makes a trim that articulates so you can compensate for the ceiling slope.

Then 3-4 can lights over your work bench/tool box location. Put that on a separate switch.

Just remember it’s better to have more sources of light at a “lower” setting than 2-3 brighter than the sun fixtures. It’s no fun looking up to high and losing your vision for a few seconds after.
 

yz450mm

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jun 10, 2013
Messages
3,607
Reaction score
7,304
Run a separate switched 20 amp circuit halfway up the wall all the way around, with duplex outlets every 8 ft.

Install low profile flat panel strip lights at mid height to help with side lighting and seeing underneath the boat. I would also put it on a dimmer to use as ambient lighting if you want.

The circuit would also come in handy for hanging things like beer signs or decorative lights on the wall.
 

TimeBandit

Well-Known Member
Joined
Sep 18, 2019
Messages
2,433
Reaction score
5,531
LED tubes, 5000 or 6000 color temperature, 8 feet off the ground, 3 feet from the wall if you are working on stuff.

This from my old airplane mechanic mentor (not the LED part) it has worked well in my garage(s)
 

scottchbrite

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jul 16, 2012
Messages
1,025
Reaction score
2,048

Barrina LED Shop Light, 8FT 72W 9000LM 5000K, Daylight White, V Shape, Clear Cover, Hight Output, Linkable , T8 LED Tube Lights, for Garage 8 Foot with Plug (Pack of 10)​



@Markus I just installed several of these Barrina lights under a mezzanine I built in my shop. Under the mezzanine is my mill, lathe, and welding tables. I like them, plenty if light, easy to install, and I like the ability to link them. My only complaint is that the kelvin (color) is different than the high bays in the rest of the shop.
 

Sharky

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jan 11, 2023
Messages
1,722
Reaction score
6,365
If you have a Costco near you, these have been really good for me-

Koda LED lighting. https://kodabuilt.com/collections/shop-lights

You can link them together. Comes with remote and motion sensing.
I have been replacing my old 4 lamp, florescent, 32W each, troffer lights with these. Extremely happy with them.

Don't need to run/have an outlet for each individual. One outlet and you can link several together on one outlet. Dimmable, time of day light sensing, motion detection.

Very happy.

You can get them direct from Koda if you don't have a Costco near by or they are out of stock.
 

steamin rice

No Bad Days....
Joined
Dec 20, 2007
Messages
4,017
Reaction score
2,463
1707869965405.png


I have 16 ft ceilings in my RV garage, and opted for LED hi-bay lights - Each fixture puts out about 16k lumens. 10 fixtures total on 2 circuits so that the center 4 can be turned on/off separately from the outside 6. This works great with the high ceilings, but for lower ceilings I don't know if that's the best option. I will say that I'm glad that I have plenty of light at certain times.
 

PDQH2O

Well-Known Member
Joined
Aug 31, 2011
Messages
517
Reaction score
870

I love the LED UFO lights in the thread link. But as said earlier, they work great on a high ceiling height, not sure how they’d work in a lower height.
 

DLC

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jan 18, 2013
Messages
11,048
Reaction score
16,685
I have 3 -4ft linkable light fixtures on each side of my boat and 2 at the stern they are about 10 ft off the ground due to racking positioned
its great for a wipe down ! Garage is very bright around the outside of the boat

I would go with
multi zones for different tasks, ceiling and walls make them all Dimmable

plan the space - toolbox, cabinet, storage, carts etc
where is the boat going to be located in the garage / What height is the boat on the trailer

something like this maybe 2 rows on the walls about 7- 8 ft and one down lower

8000 lumen - 96in long strip 4 per side - 32 ft of light

paint sheen and color makes a difference also

IMG_9483.jpeg
 

Mcob25rg

Well-Known Member
Joined
Aug 2, 2017
Messages
1,544
Reaction score
3,233
JM & Scotchbrite for the win - what they said. That’s what I have in my building. 4 8’ @ $100 on Amazon. Do the whole thing for $200
 

Yoshiro

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jan 15, 2021
Messages
539
Reaction score
1,427
x2 on the Amazon Barrina 8' LED lights. I've got about 36 of them in my shop and it's fantastic. I went down the walls also like a paint booth does. Doing wheel bearings, engine assembly, buffing, etc is great, no shadows.
 

~JM~

Well-Known Member
Joined
Sep 7, 2022
Messages
231
Reaction score
336

24'x 24' garage with 9' ceiling height. I was able to use nine 8' lights. I like the 5000K light. Plenty of illumination without too much glare. I wired up a switch to select each bay, or both. Super easy install. Figure out your lay-out & dimensions, snap a line & install the mounting clips. I used course thread screw in dry-wall inserts, then ran the mounting screw into that. Snap the lightweight fixtures up into the clips & wire them up.
 

hallett21

Well-Known Member
Joined
Nov 9, 2010
Messages
18,392
Reaction score
23,722
Alright if you wanna get rowdy let’s go all the way.

Recessed tape light. Get something at 2-4 watts per foot.



I did these a few years ago

1707936485588.jpeg


1707936602169.jpeg
 
Top