Unfortunately work is taking up all of my time at the moment so updates have been a little slow, a few more weeks and hopefully I will be able to carry on at full speed.
I did get a couple of hours the other day and whilst waiting on a glued piece of timber to dry I started to mock up how the MH lights will work ( hopefully)
You may have read earlier in the thread that I had designed a lighting bracket to move the lights front to back. I was never really happy with it as it didnt allow the rotation I want. To rotate the lights and point them towards the back is key to avoid lighting the glass and also too much light spill through the glass onto what will be the dining room table.
I felt that my lighting rig was waaay too over complicated for what was needed so I scrapped it and decided to go with the conventional aluminium wardrobe track with runners.
Each track will be 1 metre long and will span front to back.
Inside the track will be the runners, small castor wheels that will allow me to move the lights.
The vital element is the ceiling mounting projector brackets that I found. These will allow 360 degrees of rotation plus 100 degrees of tilt. The amount of rotation gets locked off with an allen key screw and the amount of tilt is adjusted with the large thumb screw in the centre.
Making some adjustments to the reflector meant that i could bolt one end of the bracket to it and the other end to the runner inside the tracking.
I couldnt resist firing up one of the 250w ballasts to see what it looks like.
Things to iron out
Rotating the reflector towards the back of the tank alters the weight distribution and because it all pivots on one point the reflector rotates to one side slightly. During this test I hadnt fastened the bolts tightly which I think would minimise the amount of roll but i still think i will need to make adjustments elsewhere also.
I thought maybe two runners per reflector would stop it altogether as there would be to parallel points to fix the brackets to and wouldnt allow any roll.
Or some bolts that screw through the brackets and run either side of the tracking would stop the upper bracket rolling.