The Home Improvement Thread

Silverback

Lima Gulf Bravo Foxtrot Juliet Bravo
Thank you Captain Obvious! LOL

I'm guessing its a Wilton as well. Hopefully not a HD Wilton... they break easy. Very easy. I broke their biggest one in about a year. 20,000 PSI cast.

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Anathollo

Armorall is my choice of lube
Staff member

PSU Taco85

Well-Known Member
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Got some more wiring done in the shop, had to help my dad all day running a gas line for one of his jobs so I didn't have as much time as I liked. I'll wire the traffic light tomorrow maybe lol

Anyway I put a tandem 8' flourescent fixture in on each side in the front of the shop, also added the protector tubes since these sit around 8' off the ground and I don't want them to shatter if a piece of shrapnal hits them lol

They are controlled from the Shop next to the garage door opener on each respective side. Light pictures are hard to do justice but here's a few shots. I am open to feedback, thinking of adding another 8' row on each side to extend it even further, can never have too much light!
 

Oswego

n00b
I put them all over my basement before I knew about them. Think I'd go LED in hindsight. My office has florescent lights so last thing I need is them at home as well.

Doesn't help I have macular degeneration along with bad eyesight to begin with. Need as much help as I can get. Just got my first set of bi-focals this year

Here's why:
Fluorescent Flicker
Some fluorescent lights flicker as they warm up because the ballast has yet to produce the right amount of electricity to power the bulb. Once the bulb is warmed up, the flicker is supposed to disappear. According to the Canadian Centre for Occupational Health and Safety, however, some people can still sense the flickering of fluorescent lights as the ballast regulates electricity flow through the bulb. Anytime the voltage flowing through the bulb changes, the light flickers. In places such as schools and office buildings, where fluorescent light use is common, other power functions, such as heating and air conditioning, can cause voltage changes and flickering. It's this strobe-like flickering effect that can cause eye strain.

Symptoms of Eye Strain

People with eye strain experience burning eyes, watery eyes, blurred vision, and an increased sensitivity to light that can cause headaches. If you're sitting in front of a computer for hours a day, eye strain can get even worse. Your eyes may blur when you glance from your monitor to papers on your desk, or you may experience color burn---seeing the colors displayed on your monitor for a second after you look away from the source.

Avoiding Eye Strain
Eye strain will usually go away once you remove the source of the strain. The Division of Occupational Health and Safety recommends performing periodic eye exercises such as blinking, cupping your hands over your eyes and breathing deeply, and working on up-and-down and left-to-right eye movements with your lids closed.

Proper Lighting
Fluorescent bulbs with high-frequency electronic ballasts instead of older magnetic ballasts tend to produce less eyestrain. They convert electricity into a high-frequency voltage which, even when it flickers, is so fast that it's invisible to the human eye. Replacing old fluorescent bulbs with newer, more efficient electronic-ballast bulbs is one of the best ways to fight eyestrain. Because workstations are often over-lit from above, closing drapes and blinds can help reduce the glare that contributes to eyestrain. Your computer monitor should face windows or task lamps at a 90-degree angle. If possible, use a glare screen or lay paperwork over your monitor so that it overhangs by approximately 2 inches, cutting glare from overhead fluorescent lighting.
 

Silverback

Lima Gulf Bravo Foxtrot Juliet Bravo

PSU Taco85

Well-Known Member
I put them all over my basement before I knew about them. Think I'd go LED in hindsight. My office has florescent lights so last thing I need is them at home as well.

Doesn't help I have macular degeneration along with bad eyesight to begin with. Need as much help as I can get. Just got my first set of bi-focals this year

Here's why:
Fluorescent Flicker
Some fluorescent lights flicker as they warm up because the ballast has yet to produce the right amount of electricity to power the bulb. Once the bulb is warmed up, the flicker is supposed to disappear. According to the Canadian Centre for Occupational Health and Safety, however, some people can still sense the flickering of fluorescent lights as the ballast regulates electricity flow through the bulb. Anytime the voltage flowing through the bulb changes, the light flickers. In places such as schools and office buildings, where fluorescent light use is common, other power functions, such as heating and air conditioning, can cause voltage changes and flickering. It's this strobe-like flickering effect that can cause eye strain.

Symptoms of Eye Strain

People with eye strain experience burning eyes, watery eyes, blurred vision, and an increased sensitivity to light that can cause headaches. If you're sitting in front of a computer for hours a day, eye strain can get even worse. Your eyes may blur when you glance from your monitor to papers on your desk, or you may experience color burn---seeing the colors displayed on your monitor for a second after you look away from the source.

Avoiding Eye Strain
Eye strain will usually go away once you remove the source of the strain. The Division of Occupational Health and Safety recommends performing periodic eye exercises such as blinking, cupping your hands over your eyes and breathing deeply, and working on up-and-down and left-to-right eye movements with your lids closed.

Proper Lighting
Fluorescent bulbs with high-frequency electronic ballasts instead of older magnetic ballasts tend to produce less eyestrain. They convert electricity into a high-frequency voltage which, even when it flickers, is so fast that it's invisible to the human eye. Replacing old fluorescent bulbs with newer, more efficient electronic-ballast bulbs is one of the best ways to fight eyestrain. Because workstations are often over-lit from above, closing drapes and blinds can help reduce the glare that contributes to eyestrain. Your computer monitor should face windows or task lamps at a 90-degree angle. If possible, use a glare screen or lay paperwork over your monitor so that it overhangs by approximately 2 inches, cutting glare from overhead fluorescent lighting.

All the fluorescent bulbs have electronic cold start ballasts so there's very little flicker I've noticed. I usually get hammered enough out in the garage where I wouldn't be able to tell if it was the beer or the high frequency ballast anyhow :)

You can always swap the bulbs with LED replacements. I did it in the garage and am very very happy with them. I posted a link the them somewhere in here. @tx_shooter bought the same ones and I believe he is very happy with them as well.

Found them... not as bright as T5HO bulbs but they are nice.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00UNIJOR...87ae-6160a7f00acc&ie=UTF8&qid=1507600191&sr=1

I had thought about swapping them out too, my dad has a box of those sitting at his shop I've been meaning to swap them out with to test but haven't gotten around to it. I've been trying to save money for truck parts so the last thing I need is to be spending more money on light bulbs at the moment lol
 

Silverback

Lima Gulf Bravo Foxtrot Juliet Bravo
Just buy a 4 pack and see. IMHO they don't appear as bright as the ones you have though. But they were just as bright if not brighter than the ones I had. I plan (someday) to install a few more fixtures in the garage and add those to them.
 

Silverback

Lima Gulf Bravo Foxtrot Juliet Bravo
Oh and on a sad note... one of my "medium ass fans" I installed about 15 months ago stopped fanning and lighting. Says it has a limited lifetime warranty (whatever that means.. probably nothing) so I need to visit Lowes tomorrow and talk to them.
 

tx_shooter

It is not a war crime the first time.
Staff member
I put those LED bulbs in my garage and love them. I wish I had done it years sooner (or at least as soon as I could afford them). They are fast and easy to install and work great.
 

PSU Taco85

Well-Known Member
Just buy a 4 pack and see. IMHO they don't appear as bright as the ones you have though. But they were just as bright if not brighter than the ones I had. I plan (someday) to install a few more fixtures in the garage and add those to them.

Yeah I may do that and do a comparison difference. Even so, I'd have to throw out almost 70 fluorescent bulbs to swap them over, most of them are 14' in the air. That is going to suck
 

Silverback

Lima Gulf Bravo Foxtrot Juliet Bravo
70!!! Damn... 70?! WOW.. Not worth it... replace as needed.

70! I have 14. LOL You running a tanning salon in there as well?
 

PSU Taco85

Well-Known Member
Months after you all recommended to get my speakers off the ground in the shop I finally had a few hours today to take care of it. Built a simple shelve with the left over wood I had when I finished the inside of the shop, may not be the prettiest but simple and effective and as usual I overbuild everything lol

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