BradB - Work Light Question

PAW

New member
Hey Brad!

In a couple of pics, I seen your long florescent work lights. They have orange tops and bottoms with hooks. They look to be attached to a reel on your ceiling.



Do you use these for night time interior detailing?

If so. How well do they work?

Do you find them too large/long?



I recently seen smaller ones. They use a shorter double tube instead of the single long one.
 
Sorry for the late reply. Yes the shop lights are for interior use and for under car use. In fact, you will notice I have several of them hanging up. I tend to keep one perfectly clean and use it for the interior only. The other I use under the car when I do mechanical work. It tends to get dirt on it I never want to chance getting in the interior. They are very useful for close up looks at detailing. I love them. And with the reel, they are always at hand.



Honestly, I would imagine the double tube variety might be fine but I like the long even light distribution of the longer lights. It illuminates a broad area and doesn't give you strong "hot spots" or a flash light effect that some smaller lights do.
 
I bought a handheld fluorescent a month back, and took out the inner cardboard masking that extended down the tube because it had ads that showed on the outside. Now it seems that was a good thing for shielding my eyes against the glare.



Is it common for these tubes to have this protection? I will have to put some shielding back in if I can't find another way round it.





Ken Silver

--------------

1993 Mercedes SL500, 1991 Daimler (Vanden Plas), 1992 Miata MX5 ... Finish detailing them, then start all over again...
 
:wavey



Ken,



The shield is there so you're not blinded by the light. Twist the light so it illuminates the area your working on. When you go to grab a tool you won't be staring into the light, then have to wait for your eyes to adjust again. I thought the sheild was there for advertising as well, then I understood why it's there.
 
PATHFNDR said:
The shield is there so you're not blinded by the light.



I thought that was the case. Very clever of them to put ads exactly where you're looking!



Ken Silver

--------------

1993 Mercedes SL500, 1991 Daimler (Vanden Plas), 1992 Miata MX5. Finish detailing, then start all over again...
 
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