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Recommendations for warm lighting for interior of warehouse

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Posted by tstage on Wednesday, February 8, 2023 4:39 PM

ndbprr
Has anybody thought about painting an led with yellow paint?  I know there are clear dyes that could be used to do that.

You must have skipped past Dave's earlier post:

hon30critter
One other point. Lots of 'warm white' LEDs aren't particularly warm in colour. You want something around 3000 kelvin, but if the LEDs are too 'white' then one or two coats of Tamiya Clear Yellow will give them a nice yellowish tone. That's what I did with this lantern and this headlight. Both have 0402 prewired LEDs:

Cheers!!

Dave

The Tamiya paint that Dave is referring to is their X-24 Clear Yellow.  I like to thin mine 2:1 with Tamiya X-20A thinner.  It takes more coats but allows you to acheive more subtle results between coats.

My preferred method for applying the clear yellow is dipping.  If I need more control, I use microswabs.  And I let each coat dry thoroughly before applying the next.

Tom

https://tstage9.wixsite.com/nyc-modeling

Time...It marches on...without ever turning around to see if anyone is even keeping in step.

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Posted by Mark R. on Wednesday, February 8, 2023 4:13 PM

ndbprr

Has anybody thought about painting an led with yellow paint?  I know there are clear dyes that could be used to do that.

 

Curious as to why you would want to do that ? Warm white LEDs are already the correct color for tungsten bulbs. 

Mark.

¡ uʍop ǝpısdn sı ǝɹnʇɐuƃıs ʎɯ 'dlǝɥ

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Posted by ndbprr on Wednesday, February 8, 2023 3:47 PM

Has anybody thought about painting an led with yellow paint?  I know there are clear dyes that could be used to do that.

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Posted by hornblower on Sunday, February 5, 2023 2:47 PM

Several years ago, I went to one of the local big box hardware stores the day after Christmas.  All of their remaining Christmas decorations were on clearance.  I found lights strings of 100 warm white diffuse LED's for a few bucks each.  I bought several. Yes, I had to disassemble the strings of Christmas lights to get to the LED's but it wasn't all that much trouble.  The cool part turned out to be the diffuse lighting feature.  Each 3mm LED was molded with an inverted cone in the tip.  Thus, the light reflects to the sides of the LED instead of being focused out the tip.  This means this type of LED is perfect for lighting building interiors.  I also discovered that, when looking directly at the tip of the lit LED, that the tip of the inverted cone creates a hot spot of light.  This hot spot makes the tip of the diffuse light LED look exactly like a lit sealed beam headlight.  Hey, would these work as diesel loco headlights?  Heck yes!  I have replaced all of the headlights in my blue box EMD F7 locos with these lights and they look great!  I started by tearing out the original headlight mount and replacing it with a piece of .040" styrene super-glued to the inside of the frame (similar to the original metal mount).  I then replaced the shell on the frame after removing the original headlight lenses.  I then used a drill bit that just fit inside the diameter of the headlight openings and carefully drilled centerpoints in the new styrene mount.  After removing the shell again, I finished drilling the LED locations in the styrene mount.  I next fitted the LED's in place and replaced the shell on the frame to check clearances and the accuracy of the LED placement behind the headlight openings.  Once I was happy with the LED placement, I glued the LED's to the styrene mount and painted the rear and sides of each LED with flat black paint.  The final step was to use Testors Clear Parts Cement to create new headlight lenses in the shell.  The photo below shows the headlight on and the Mars light at slightly less than full on.

  

I also used several of these diffuse light LED's to light the interior of the Holly Sugar building behind the loco in the photo.  Although the LED interior lighting is on in the photo, the "daylight" lighting of the photo and the multi-pane windows of this kit make it difficult to see the interior lighting without turning off the room lighting.

I have attached a few photos of other structures I have lit with these LED's for comparison.  Note that all of these photos were taken with "daylight" room lighting.

  

  

  

  

Hornblower

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Posted by wickman on Saturday, February 4, 2023 1:01 PM

Very informative thread.

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Posted by hon30critter on Friday, February 3, 2023 8:51 PM

Hi Matt,

The warehouse looks great! I love the weathering on the chimney and the rust on the roof.

You seem to have a pretty good grasp of how to install the lighting but I would point out the following:

crossthedog
I wanted to make sure I left access for replacing bulbs

If you use LEDs it is highly unlikely that you will ever have to replace them, especially if you use higher value resistors (5K ohms?) to reduce the current flow. LEDs have a life of at least 10,000 hrs and most will last up to 50,000 hrs. Just don't forget the resistors or you will instantly have DEDs (Dark Emitting Diodes).

One other point. Lots of 'warm white' LEDs aren't particularly warm in colour. You want something around 3000 kelvin, but if the LEDs are too 'white' then one or two coats of Tamiya Clear Yellow will give them a nice yellowish tone. That's what I did with this lantern and this headlight. Both have 0402 prewired LEDs:

Cheers!!

Dave

I'm just a dude with a bad back having a lot of fun with model trains, and finally building a layout!

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    February 2021
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Posted by crossthedog on Friday, February 3, 2023 1:57 PM

Thanks guys. Great ideas here, stuff I wouldn't have thought of, and just what I wanted to know.

MisterBeasley
Yes, it takes me a month to do a 4-walls-and-a-roof kit, but the results make me and my little figures happy.

It's taken me close to three months just to get this far, and I haven't even started the loading dock on the uphill side yet. I'm asking this stuff now because I soon have to glue the building's various components together and I wanted to make sure I left access for replacing bulbs, and dark skirting around where light might bleed through, etc. The Roof is glued to the wooden upper part, but the wooden part is just sitting on the stone foundation right now, and the shed is also not yet affixed.

Returning to model railroading after 40 years and taking unconscionable liberties with the SP&S, Northern Pacific and Great Northern roads in the '40s and '50s.

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Posted by MisterBeasley on Friday, February 3, 2023 12:58 PM

I'm old school and I use and like small incandescent bulbs for interior lighting.  I use 16 volt Miniatronics bulbs and I run them at 12 volts DC.  The bulb manufacturer isn't that important, just what my LHS had, and if you have AC power that works, too.  I do like to keep the voltage lower than the bulb rating.  It gives a warmer glow and results in longer bulb life.

The suggestion about sealing the corners and doing something to prevent the building from glowing is a good one.  I usually download a wall texture, print it and glue the paper inside to prevent bleed through, and I always use balsa strips to reinforce corners, and that seals the corners well.

If the structure will be close to a wall, block off any window that will allow light on the wall.  Seeing a window on what should be empty sky is disconcerting. 

On larger buildings, I like to install floors and sometimes walls.  Nothing fancy, just thin foam board cut to shape.  Then I use a few bulbs scattered around so parts of the building are illuminated but other parts are dark.  Yes, it takes me a month to do a 4-walls-and-a-roof kit, but the results make me and my little figures happy.

Thsi is the rear view of the DPM hotel, now sold by someoned else.  I have put in floors and walls.  Inside those windows, neatness isn't terribly important because they mostly serve as light blocks.  I've glued interior textures to the inside walls.

This is a hotel, so it shouldn't be all lit up.

 

It takes an iron man to play with a toy iron horse. 

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Posted by hon30critter on Friday, February 3, 2023 2:40 AM

Hi Matt,

I have done a lot of lighting with LEDs and I think your warehouse is perfect for lighting effects. Here are my recommendations. Don't be put off by their apparent complexity. If you can add one LED, then you can add several just as easily. Here are my recommendations:

- First, make sure that the structure is sealed against light leakage. You don't want glowing walls or light coming through the corner joints or out from under the foundation. The wood walls are much less prone to light leakage so you really only have to worry about the seams and the foundation. To block any light leakage, first make sure that the joint is completely covered with glue and then paint the joint black. You can put more appropriate interior colours over that. Light leakage at the foundation can be eliminated simply by putting a floor in the bottom of the structure;

- You definitely want to use warm white LEDs. Something in the 3000 kelvin (colour range) is ideal. You can get them on eBay. There are a lot of choices. The cheapest LEDs are generally the 3mm size. I use the much smaller 0402 or 0603 with the wires already installed. This is just one example. These are in Canadian dollars:

https://www.ebay.ca/itm/364105546113?hash=item54c661b981:g:cnkAAOSw4btjvKvj&amdata=enc%3AAQAHAAAA4OgSE6vNjMTnPsVbE8BSKckHlwKwsdlquWe67xVYZXoysvc1zpIAEOD4UdyOwhnYPvK%2F2wgF2eSSl2IeWRlp0JNcJWAANfzITsrtzucK5Mt3FufVDqNvt35%2B9H8Go4sJB%2FqLo07tHqKXib%2BkOW5Sqgb8gLvkVRqSponPC4VsD06k7teUBhm%2B4snxkOykkGHUiRf65s%2B2MJeeK865H4mlef7K8jkWO3eI5yPOMkHc3qzdZgmsteE3kR12IBG4hhWKBShTEKv67C%2BT4fDHJsHx03wJ3G3hXAWqwp4il8sMWYYH%7Ctkp%3ABk9SR8CukuXCYQ

 

- I would suggest using several LEDs instead of just one in the center of the structure. I would have two LEDs at the loading door, one about 1 1/2" inside the door opening, and one outside over the door. You can buy LEDs with lamp shades already installed and painted. The outer LED will illuminate the deck outside of the door. You might want to install a couple more exterior LEDs for other entrances or stairways.

https://www.ebay.ca/itm/152067514026?hash=item2367ee1eaa:g:iIAAAOSwVKhcnXGz&amdata=enc%3AAQAHAAAA4LyHOruMjeAzgvFe2bKsqiYq6r6qll7BfCJXBKrL5r5k0LhXp8N%2BB%2BtruwkP3exwZlo5uw6gbNd6TGdCoxKrlNTBspgjet0y2a2Mq6XWSdcMDb8K4nKXeYbnprZN7x6zrrnQ0vDKBtCXzveKiQRiafmgm6Pcjc%2BAJpXyg%2Bx4CFJPDqxIb9iBI1NrQ4ID%2BDRXDjGPxTkxqCsTYcSAVKTUrZwcz4G%2BrF7d8jXuhfSBoDX8ZaKjNTxp8odDqqxasAUVGPCa2Jj1MoATcxcbYFWR%2FFbx0aeiDsXl0WEGIItkurum%7Ctkp%3ABk9SR-rP7ubCYQ

Depending on how the warehouse was structured there may have been two separate floors in the upper level, or it might have been one large open space.  It depends on how you see the warehouse functioning. 

- I will suggest that you use resistors in series with each LED. You can use a single resistor to control several LEDs but calculating the resistor value is a PITA. The standard recommendation is 1000 ohms per LED but that still leaves the LED pretty bright at 12 volts. If you want a softer light then I would experiment with resistors in the 5000 to 20,000 ohm range. Sounds extreme, but I have used resistors as high as 30,000 ohms to mimic kerosene lanterns. Resistors are cheap on eBay. I buy mine from Digikey.

Cheers!!

Dave

I'm just a dude with a bad back having a lot of fun with model trains, and finally building a layout!

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Posted by tstage on Friday, February 3, 2023 1:32 AM

Matt,

For interior lighting you can go with either warm-white LEDs or incandescents.  Depending on the bulb voltage and how you power them, it may require you to also use resistors to achieve an even warmer glow.  Will the light fixture itself be visible through the windows or door?

I used 1.7mm-12V Miniatronics incandescent bulbs to illuminate both the interior and exterior of my NYC freight house below back in 2006:

The bulbs are a bit oversized for the HO lampshades but I really like the visual appearance of the glass bulb itself.  Their 1.2mm bulbs were better-sized but I wasn't happy with how it cast the light.  A number of them projected a crescent-shaped reflection onto the surface below.

Although the bulbs are rated at 12V, I hooked them up to the DC terminals of a spare MRC 1370 power pack and "dialed" them up to only 8-9V to give them the above appearance*.  That gave them a nice warm glow, as well as extends the life of the bulb operating them at the lower voltage.

*[The photo makes the exterior lighting appear brighter than what it actually is in-person.  The interior lighting is more representative of both.]

I do like LED lighting but my main experience with them is using them for headlight illumination.  The small flat SMD (surface mount) LEDs are especially handy for lighting brass headlamps and give them a more prototypical beam than the bulb-type.  The bulb-type I usually use when illuminating a headlamp through the clear plastic lens from inside the locomotive shell.

I do have some MTH passenger cars that use warm LED strips for interior lighting and they look fantastic.  I've even toyed with the idea of using either a function-only decoder or a lighting module board to turn lights on & off independently inside a structure.

Tom

https://tstage9.wixsite.com/nyc-modeling

Time...It marches on...without ever turning around to see if anyone is even keeping in step.

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Recommendations for warm lighting for interior of warehouse
Posted by crossthedog on Thursday, February 2, 2023 9:33 PM

I have a tall warehouse kit (the Perkins Produce) with a basement freight door that will be open, and I'm thinking of putting a light in the building that will give some glow to the folks working in the freight door but also show in the widows of the upstairs rooms, although this latter is less important. I want it to be a very warm luminescence, not some blinding stalag searchlight. I don't know anything about lighting, but I hear a lot about LEDs these days.

What would you recommend?

Here is the commercial photo of the built kit. The freight door in this one is closed but you can build it slid open, which I have done.

Thanks for your help.

-Matt

Returning to model railroading after 40 years and taking unconscionable liberties with the SP&S, Northern Pacific and Great Northern roads in the '40s and '50s.

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