If plan on recording your work with action cameras, I recommend you buy 1 light fixture and test it first for video frequency interference. I had a lot of issues having nice videos using GoPro because it would capture the light fixture flickering .... just a side note for considerationI have a new 24x24 shop, but I need to install lights. Will this fast track my RV build? We will see....What are your recommendations for shop lights?
I have a couple of screw-in LED bulbs in a ceiling fixture in my garage that do a very good job of blocking my garage door remote. I've been meaning to replace them, but the question is, with what? Every 120 VAC LED bulb or fixture I know of has an AC-DC switching power supply in it, and many of them are noisy at VHF and UHF frequencies. If you can't hear ATIS/AWOS or Clearance Delivery or Ground from your hangar with the door open, that's a problem that I thought the FCC was supposed to nip in the bud.When I’m out working the hangar, I like to listen to the local air traffic on a scanner and found that some of the LED lights produce a ton of RFI that will wipe out radio reception in your hangar.
With that in mind, and the goal of improving the lighting, I purchased a single 150 watt high bay LED from the big A to test and check for RFI and found it was clean.
Thinking I had the RFI problem squared away, I purchased 3 more of the same type and discovered 2 of the 3 had RFI problems. With a bit of work I was able to clean up the RFI with clip-on Ferrite Ring Core Noise Suppressors on the offenders and all is well.
These or equivalent from Lithonia. They are major brands and not typically junk.I just recently purchased a T-hangar. 1000 square feet. I installed 4 of the below lights after a lot of research. 24000 lumins at 165 watts. Adj between 3500, 4000,5000 for light color. Lumins are adj as well between 18000,21000,24000. They took my breath away when I turned them on for the first time.
I'm very happy with them.
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Metalux 2 ft. 400-Watt Equivalent LED Highbay with Adjustable Optics, Selectable 18K/21K/24K Lumens and 3500/4000/5000 Sel CCT HBLAOS-1824C3R - The Home Depot
Provide protection and coverage to your light bulb with the use of this Metalux Equivalent LED Highbay with Adjustable Optics Selectable Lumens and CCT.www.homedepot.com

Not bad. 85 CRI, but not great. 18000 lumens is typical.I recently put Qty 9 of the Prime Lights 8ft BOLT 6 lamp LED fixtures in my 48' x 40' hangar . Probably only needed 6 but I like it as bright as the sun in any space I work in.
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Color rendering is more important than color temperature, although they are both important. While 5000K is closer to sunlight in perception, sunlight is full spectrum. Most 5000k products have a very narrow spectrum. They are targeted to end users who don’t know the specs and jump at higher lumen outputs and the lower price.I'm looking at some 96", 5000K color temp, 15000-20000 lumen LED fixtures on Amazon for my hoped-for hangar. Some are designed to be mounted directly to the ceiling and others can be either direct-mounted or hung. I would suspend them from the hangar ceiling about 10' above the floor. They typically advertise beam widths of 270 degrees, which should help reduce shadows when you install multiple fixtures. (But I'm not sure how it's possible to achieve a beamwidth of 270 degrees from a flush-mounted ceiling fixture. Maybe some of the light bounces off the ceiling.) They can be daisy-chained, usually up to three (sometimes four) per string. I've found power cords up to 10' long on Amazon. They are typically < $250 for an 8, 10, or even 12-pack. Even the ones that are designed to hang, and therefore have a sturdier frame, typically weigh less than 3 pounds each. They typically consume 80-120 Watts of 120 VAC. I like 5000K, which is on the warmer side of direct sunlight, better than 6000-6500K, which to me is too blue (nothing personal, OP). And anything 4000K or below looks too yellow to me.
At night, or if the room has zero daylight, take a color swatch, or a bundle of different colored wires and note the colors under those lights. Then take a painting you like and do the same.I prefer daylight (6500). I installed 4' LEDs.
Just Google up IES (Iluminating Engineers Society) for all kinds of recommendations, application guides, etc….Excellent conversation, I am learning so much.
I have four Commercial Electric 4000K lights and two Feit 4000K shop lights, all with a stated CRI of 80 in my 700 sf garage with a 9' ceiling, and they provide most of the light I need. I took my X-Rite (now Calibrite) Color Checker Passport (I'm an amateur photographer) out to the garage and looked at the color swatches with just the Commercial Electric lights on and with just the Feit lights on, and with all of the lights on. The colors all looked pretty normal to me under all combinations of the Commercial Electric lights and Feit shop lights. I photographed the Color Checker 18% neutral gray card with my Nikon DSLR set for a color temp of 4000K and looked at the file in Adobe Lightroom using the eyedropper tool. The R, G, and B values were 62.7%, 63.8%, and 61.3%. Solar radiation also peaks in green and falls off on the red and blue ends of the spectrum.Color rendering is more important than color temperature, although they are both important. While 5000K is closer to sunlight in perception, sunlight is full spectrum. Most 5000k products have a very narrow spectrum. They are targeted to end users who don’t know the specs and jump at higher lumen outputs and the lower price.
It will typically cost you more for 3500-4000k products but they won’t “look yellow”, if they have a CRI of 90 or better.
We wouldn’t have even been talking about 4000k products with high CRI a few years ago as it was just too cost prohibitive due to the expensive phosphors and additional LED’s it took to equal the lumen outputs and get a high CRI.
The Metalux Low Bays wouldn’t be a good fit for 9’ ceiling.I have four Commercial Electric 4000K lights and two Feit 4000K shop lights, all with a stated CRI of 80 in my 700 sf garage with a 9' ceiling, and they provide most of the light I need. I took my X-Rite (now Calibrite) Color Checker Passport (I'm an amateur photographer) out to the garage and looked at the color swatches with just the Commercial Electric lights on and with just the Feit lights on, and with all of the lights on. The colors all looked pretty normal to me under all combinations of the Commercial Electric lights and Feit shop lights. I photographed the Color Checker 18% neutral gray card with my Nikon DSLR set for a color temp of 4000K and looked at the file in Adobe Lightroom using the eyedropper tool. The R, G, and B values were 62.7%, 63.8%, and 61.3%. Solar radiation also peaks in green and falls off on the red and blue ends of the spectrum.
Why did I think everything looked yellow at 4000K and under? Might have been the cataracts I had when I installed the lights.
I like the specs on the Metalux fixtures with the adjustable tilt on the "light engines," but I wish they were longer to distribute the light more broadly.
I agree. But I'm looking at the Metalux High Bay lights, Model # HBLAOS-1824C3R. The hangar ceiling is around 20'.The Metalux Low Bays wouldn’t be a good fit for 9’ ceiling.
Gotcha.I agree. But I'm looking at the Metalux High Bay lights, Model # HBLAOS-1824C3R. The hangar ceiling is around 20'.
I rent, but the owner installed six or eight pairs of 4' LEDs. The ceiling is pretty high. I would love more, but it's ok. I use a local light to see the work. 20' is way up there. I would consider more light than you think you need.I agree. But I'm looking at the Metalux High Bay lights, Model # HBLAOS-1824C3R. The hangar ceiling is around 20'.
