Fence Lighting

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jmellc

Senior Member
Location
Durham, NC
Occupation
Facility Maintenance Tech. Licensed Electrician
Customer is building a wooden privacy "fence within a fence" in back yard. Roughly a half oval, about 50x75. 5 feet high. Wants some lights on the fence to shine in & light up the yard. I have thought of putting 4 florescent floods around the fence, about equal spacing. would mount on a round bell box on top of a 4x4 support. Yard should be lit enough to walk, run safely & see gopher holes, twigs, etc. Does not have to be bright as day.

Has anyone else done a similar job? Any special low profile lights out there that mount lower down & light up just the ground?
 

TNBaer

Senior Member
Location
Oregon
I try to avoid putting flood lights at eye level, though I see it done all the time.

Agreed. You'll have gobs of glare. I avoid floods unless there's no other option.

You could put some inexpensive post tops. Assuming posts are 10' apart the ML4G181PTBK would be plenty of light. You could even do a wall mount. Super inexpensive as well.

http://www.maxlite.com/product-documents/ML4/DataSheet_ML4G181PLBK.PDF

When on a budget but you don't want to look cheap, you go to Progress:

http://progresslighting.com/products.aspx?page=1&Category=60

You cold throw up some exterior rounds as well, always a nice option but a little pricier:

http://www.fclighting.com/product/exterior/fced/exterior-decor/

Or maybe you like what Progress has to offer but you want to prove your good taste with your purchase. If so, ELK Lighting Group is more your speed:

http://www.raelighting.com/eSource/items/2-S0-lV1Category-lV2Outdoor.aspx?store=Elk
 

jmellc

Senior Member
Location
Durham, NC
Occupation
Facility Maintenance Tech. Licensed Electrician
Agreed. You'll have gobs of glare. I avoid floods unless there's no other option.

You could put some inexpensive post tops. Assuming posts are 10' apart the ML4G181PTBK would be plenty of light. You could even do a wall mount. Super inexpensive as well.

http://www.maxlite.com/product-documents/ML4/DataSheet_ML4G181PLBK.PDF

When on a budget but you don't want to look cheap, you go to Progress:

http://progresslighting.com/products.aspx?page=1&Category=60

You cold throw up some exterior rounds as well, always a nice option but a little pricier:

http://www.fclighting.com/product/exterior/fced/exterior-decor/

Or maybe you like what Progress has to offer but you want to prove your good taste with your purchase. If so, ELK Lighting Group is more your speed:

http://www.raelighting.com/eSource/items/2-S0-lV1Category-lV2Outdoor.aspx?store=Elk

Thanks, a lot of good stuff here to look over.

Actually, the customer called this afternoon & simplified the issue. Wants standard flood lights like she has in her other home. I will get 4 double floods with glare shells, mount them on post tops to bell boxes and shine them at about a 15-20 degree angle. Picture about a half oval, 50' wide, 75' deep. I will put 2 double floods to left and 2 to right. Keeps any bulb from facing directly toward house and glaring through windows. Also does not shine toward any neighbor. If I have to, I can raise them higher with rigid risers to spread better. May be trial & error to some degree.

She is in a big hurry to have it done when she moves in so I will start this week to get my switch leg done in the house & conduit out the wall, ready to tag onto the fence as it gets built. I am putting boxes at every post for flexibility. Customer seems to know what she wants but that can change with use. I will leave plenty of room for changes.

A big blessing with this job is not having to dig. Saves lots of time & no equipment to rent or drag around.

At one point, I even thought of rope lights all the way around the fence. I don't recall seeing them done this way but I'm sure they have been. I have mostly used it for over cabinet up lighting and under cabinet over counter. Not sure if they would cast very far into the center though.
 

kwired

Electron manager
Location
NE Nebraska
Set the fence on fire, will be nice and bright for a little while and won't have all the dark areas between luminaires like other options will:cool:
 

jmellc

Senior Member
Location
Durham, NC
Occupation
Facility Maintenance Tech. Licensed Electrician
Set the fence on fire, will be nice and bright for a little while and won't have all the dark areas between luminaires like other options will:cool:

Ha ha, I may try that if something happens to frustrate me.:lol:
 
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