Re: Garage wiring
2.4 kW (or even 1.92 kW) of incandescant light is a lot of lumens. . .unless this is an airplane garage, or some other big and wide garage.
Let's go back to the opening post.
The question is: How many lampholders? Not Watts of bulb.
Answer: If I install one Watt bulbs, I can install 2,400 lampholders.
220.14(J) says that the only calculation for dwellings for general lighting is 3 W/ft?, where the square footage is determined by the outside dimension of the habitable floor space as specified by 220.12.
Garage, while included in the dwelling, is not habitable floor, so, adding the lampholders, even though one is adding load, doesn't affect the calculation. The end result is that the circuit can easily be overloaded if I turn it all on, whatever "all" is, but the NEC is clear to say in 90.1(B) that the rules "results in an installation that is essentially free from hazard but not necessarily efficient, convenient, or adequate for good service or future expansion of electrical use."
In my opinion, dwelling general lighting calcultions and the resultant installation following that minimum standard is as clear an embodiment of 90.1(B) as it gets.
Question: "How many 20A 120v Duplex receptacles can go on one circuit?" (in a dwelling garage.)
Answer: There is no limit to how many.