[s-cars] NAC - Dream Garage Ceiling and Wallmaterialrecommendation
peter schneider
dagmar_peter at yahoo.ca
Fri Mar 11 10:31:01 EST 2005
I installed double 8' high output lights on both sides they give a lot
more light then normal fluorescent light fixtures. Also a Genie screw
drive door opener it's the ultimate in my opinion it's a bit more money
but it last's longer. I have one now for over ten years in my other
garage & the new unit I bought for my 16' x 35' project workshop
addition is super quiet. I installed a "T" bar ceiling so I would have
access to install additional wiring or what ever I may have missed. The
walls are just plain 5/8" drywall. Also an electrical sup panel for my
Mig & Tig welder since my project right now is to get my 72 Citroen SM
with the V 6 Maserati with a broken timing chain back on the road by
this summer, the car also needs some body work.
Peter
93 S4
2000 A6 Q Avant
-----Original Message-----
From: s-car-list-bounces at audifans.com
[mailto:s-car-list-bounces at audifans.com] On Behalf Of Taka Mizutani
Sent: March 9, 2005 20:33
To: Peter Schulz
Cc: s-car-list at audifans.com
Subject: Re: [s-cars] NAC - Dream Garage Ceiling and
Wallmaterialrecommendation
I forgot that- what Peter mentions is a very good idea- having a
subpanel is nice. I had to run down to the basement when the circuit
breaker tripped, that was a PITA.
Taka
On Wed, 09 Mar 2005 08:42:24 -0500, Peter Schulz <pcschulz at comcast.net>
wrote:
> Lee:
>
> You may also want to consider GFCIs instead of regular frounded
outlets, or
> a local fusebox in lieu of that long walk to the basement when that 15
or
> 20 amp power tool actually draws more than that on startup.
>
> Best thing that I did was to put a 60 amp sub panel in the barn -
ready
> for 220 V if I need it, and yes, my Craftsman 175 psi compressor does
> occasionally trip the breaker.
>
> -Peter
>
>
> At 07:41 AM 3/9/2005, Lee Levitt wrote:
> >I think you're right.
> >
> >I'm going to talk with my electrician about twin 8' fixtures near the
wall
> >(will illuminate whether the garage door is open or closed) and
another in
> >the middle, either parallel to the others or perhaps perpendicular at
the
> >front of the garage to illuminate the engine bay. Then some more 4 or
8'
> >fixtures by my bench.
> >
> >Most of my real work is done with one car in the middle of the
garage, so
> >having lights on each side (and one above) makes sense to me.
> >
> >Lee
> >
> > > -----Original Message-----
> > > From: Taka Mizutani [mailto:t44tqtro at gmail.com]
> > > Sent: Tuesday, March 08, 2005 10:28 PM
> > > To: lee at wheelman.com
> > > Cc: Walsh, Edward; Joe Pizzimenti; s-car-list at audifans.com
> > > Subject: Re: [s-cars] NAC - Dream Garage Ceiling and Wall
> > > materialrecommendation
> > >
> > > Lee- that might barely be enough, seriously, if you're talking
about real
> > > light.
> > >
> > > I have a twin 4' fixture basically right above the hood of each
car in
> > > the 2 car garage, another fixture right above the utility sink,
the
> > > plain old stupid 60W lightbulb in the center of the garage and the
> > > twin bulbs in the garage door opener. With all of these lights
lit,
> > > it's not enough to comfortably work on a car at night or with the
door
> > > closed.
> > >
> > > Ideally, I'd want two more 4' twin bulb fixtures for above each
car as
> > > well as some way to illuminate at foot level- lighting sunk into
the
> > > concrete would be ideal for this, don't know how to accomplish
that. I
> > > think with some work lights and my 4-tube drop light, that might
> > > suffice for the lack of in-floor lighting.
> > >
> > > So what I'm trying to say is that having about 10 fluorescent 4'
long
> > > tubes is barely enough for a two car garage.
> > >
> > > If I were to do it again, rather than having fixtures that run
across
> > > the width of the garage, I'd have duplexed twin-tube industrial
> > > fixtures that run lengthwise front to back in the garage ceiling
> > > (total 8ft. length of fixture), two just off from the walls and
two
> > > spaced equally in the remaining width of the garage. That would
give
> > > awesome coverage from above and hopefully give enough wall
reflection
> > > off of the white-painted drywall so that you wouldn't need a ton
of
> > > lighting down low.
> > >
> > > This might happen anyway, because the garage is not wired with
enough
> > > electrical capacity as it stands- if I want to run an air
compressor
> > > and some other stuff, I'll want to add at least 3 30amp circuits
and
> > > rewire the existing outlets to use the additional circuits.
> > >
> > > Taka
> > >
> > >
> > > On Tue, 8 Mar 2005 10:42:14 -0500, Lee Levitt <lee at wheelman.com>
wrote:
> > >
> > > > Funny we're talking about garages...I had an electrician in
yesterday to
> > > > scope out, among other things, sufficient light for the garage.
> > > >
> > > > Mine's a two car attached and right now it has 1 decent sized
> > > fluorescent
> > > > fixture. I'm replacing it with two 4' twin bulb fixtures near
the front
> > > of
> > > > the garage, another in the middle of the garage and 1 more
toward the
> > > back
> > > > over my workbench.
> > >
> >
> >
> >
> >_______________________________________________
> >S-CAR-List mailing list
> >S-CAR-List at audifans.com
> >http://www.audifans.com/mailman/listinfo/s-car-list
>
> 1991 200 20v Q Avant Titan Grey
> 1991 200 20v Q Avant Indigo Mica
> 1991 90 20v Q Red
> 1990 CQ silver (awaiting S2 engine transplant)
>
> Chelmsford Ma, USA
>
>
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