(11-18-2021, 06:42 PM)Oldwood2409 Wrote: I am in the final process of building a new shop (worked out of a two car garage for 30 yrs). My question is around lighting. There are recommendations that I should use between 60 and 80 foot candles (fc)per square foot, but there others that state that I should use up to 125 fc/ft^2
I recently re-did my shop. Expanding it was more than I wanted to spend, so I decided to make the one car garage I had (10'x20' on the outside) as nice as I could.
The walls and ceiling are both white. The inside space is a little over 9'x19'. The ceiling is vaulted, but there are ceiling joints. The lights rest on top of the ceiling joists, about 8' 6" above the floor.
I ended up with two sets of 4' LED shop lights I tried:
4 x Hyperikon 5000K, 4100 lumens, 84+ CRI (Hyperikon went out of business, but these were well-reviewed lights.)
6 x NorthLux 5000K, 4200 lumens, 95 CRI (
https://store.waveformlighting.com/produ...4781539430)
Some observations:
* I could totally tell the difference between the 84+ CRI and the 95 CRI, especially when looking at red and orange. The NorthLux looked better.
* Four sets of light of either kind were not enough. I tried to make it work with four, but it really wasn't enough.
* The Hyperikon had a cover so you couldn't see the individual LEDs, but the NorthLux does not. I prefer the cover, but I think it impacts the color rendering. Without the cover, it is difficult for me to see the edge of hand plane blade I'm sharpening. The individual LEDs reflect too intensely from the sharpened surfaces. I'm still working on a solution for that.
* I like white walls and ceiling. I was concerned it would have glare, but that's not an issue.
* I thought the 5000K would be "too blue," but I actually like it. The color is very similar to daylight.
If you don't want to flood the whole space, another option championed by Adam Cherubini in article called the "The Ultimate Hand Tool Shop" is to use a bunch of clamp worklights above your workbench to provide focused illumination. Before I redid my shop I used that method and it worked very well.
Longer version if you care: I was going to order the NorthLux lights in December, but they were out of stock. I was also hesitant to order because they were expensive and there were few reviews. They kept pushing the availability date until it was months and months later. I thought I couldn't wait any more, so I decided the Hyperikon lights would be good enough, especially since they were so much cheaper ($120 for four vs $500 for six). After more construction delays, I put the Hyperikon up and concluded I needed two more. I went to order more and found that all the Hyperikon listings were gone from Amazon. Then I learned Hyperikon went out of business. By this point the NorthLux lights were back in stock and I decided to just bite the bullet and spend what I thought was a completely ridiculous amount on lights. For my eyes and my situation, the more expensive lights were totally worth it. I assume that eventually the high CRI LED lights will become more standard and they will be much less expensive.
Mark