I have gone to the 100 watt equivalent cfl's instead of the 4 and 8 foot tubes. They are quicker to install and cheaper o replace. I have a couple on a rolling stand in the new section which will have to do until I can get that area paneled, insulated and wired as well. I might get all of this done before I turn 85, but no guarantees. The leds you saw are now less than $7.00 and rated for 50,000 hours, which is not when they will fail but rather how long it takes before the eye is able to tell a difference in brightness compared to a new unit.
Thanks, Dale! After seeing the pictures, I have a much better understanding of how you did your cords. I like it. I like the LED bulb idea. I just bit the bullet and bought 3 LED bulbs to see how well they work. As the volumes go up and prices come down, I am sure we will all eventually have them throughout our houses.
In the meantime, since I was dealing with virgin territory for lighting my shop (had one 60 watt bulb in the ceiling), I went wild. I put in six eight foot dual T5 fluorescent fixtures (four 4 foot tubes per fixture). My wife says it is like noon sun in there. You just can't have enough light in the workshop.
From: DoIt_Yourself@yahoogroups.com [mailto:DoIt_Yourself@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of Dale S
Sent: Tuesday, January 15, 2013 3:32 PM
To: DoIt_Yourself@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [DIY] Traveling Outlets Pics [2 Attachments]
[Attachment(s) from Dale S included below]
Excuse the mess, after all it is a "work" shop. BTW the light you see that is on is an LED and now I never have to stumble
around in the dark or turn on a light as I walk through the shop, about 40 watt equivalent and costs less than a dollar a year to run.
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