MA64 8W in-ground light planning reference
MA64 8W in-ground light is supported by the customer MA64 source package as a compact recessed ground-light model for walkway edges, facade accents, landscape details, columns, and low-profile outdoor uplighting. The source images show MA64 8W, lens-angle choices, lamp and hole-size references, anti-glare accessories, and multiple panel/trim forms.
This page is now treated as an MA64 walkway-planning reference. The current source package supports the product details above, but it does not verify a named landmark project record, fixture quantity, installed route, control method, or final project scope. Any named-project attribution should be checked against approved project documents before use.
What MA64 8W details are supported by the source package?
| Source-backed item | Safe page wording | How to use it |
|---|---|---|
| Model reference | MA64 8W | Use as the primary product identity for this page and related inquiry notes. |
| Lens-angle choices | 10, 15, 24, 36, 50, and 60 degree options shown in the source image. | Choose narrower options for focused accents and wider options for softer walkway or facade-edge coverage. |
| Lamp-size reference | 65 x 105 mm reference shown in the product image. | Use as a pre-selection check; confirm final drawing before installation planning. |
| Hole-size reference | 58 x 140 mm reference shown in the product image. | Use to start recess and sleeve discussion; confirm final site dimensions before cutting or embedding. |
| Trim and panel forms | Round, square, semi, dual, triple, and quad visual options are shown. | Match the visible trim to paving, stone, decking, or facade-edge appearance. |
| Anti-glare accessories | Deep-cup, honeycomb, dome-style, and combined anti-glare options are shown. | Compare these when pedestrians may view the fixture from close range. |
How should MA64 be selected for walkway or facade-edge lighting?
| Project condition | Recommended MA64 planning check | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Pedestrians can look directly down at the fixture. | Start with anti-glare trim review and a lower-intensity aiming mock-up. | Close viewing angles can turn a small recessed fixture into a visible bright point. |
| The fixture sits near a wall, column, tree, or step edge. | Compare 10, 15, 24, and 36 degree options first. | Focused beams help define vertical features without flooding nearby walking surfaces. |
| The route needs softer orientation light. | Compare 50 or 60 degree options and check spacing on the actual path. | Wider beams can reduce dark gaps, but they still need glare review. |
| The paving material is thick, uneven, or historically sensitive. | Confirm recess depth, sleeve position, drainage path, service access, and approved cut locations. | Ground lights are easiest to plan before paving or stone work is locked. |
MA64 trim and anti-glare option map
| Option area | Visible source choices | Selection note |
|---|---|---|
| Panel or trim form | Round, square, semi, dual, triple, and quad options. | Choose the form that best fits the paving geometry and design language. |
| Glare-control form | Deep cup, honeycomb, dome-style, or combined shield concepts. | Use when the viewer position is near the fixture or when the light source must be visually softened. |
| Beam direction | Multiple lens angles are listed in the source image. | Match beam width to target height, setback, and allowed spill area. |
| Installation discussion | Lamp-size and hole-size references are shown. | Confirm final drawing and site tolerance before construction work begins. |
Buyer checklist before using MA64 on a walkway project
- Confirm whether the lighting goal is path guidance, accent uplighting, facade-edge grazing, or a mixed effect.
- Mark the viewer positions where glare could appear, including path edges, steps, seating areas, windows, and camera views.
- Choose a starting lens angle from the source-backed options, then review a night mock-up or lighting layout.
- Confirm trim style, anti-glare accessory, cable route, recess depth, drainage path, and maintenance access.
- Confirm final drawing, product image set, route plan, and project attribution documents before using a named case description.
Common MA64 walkway-lighting mistakes
| Mistake | Why it matters | Better action |
|---|---|---|
| Keeping an unverified landmark title as the main proof. | A page title is not enough to prove project attribution or installed scope. | Use source-backed product and planning facts until approved project records are available. |
| Selecting the widest lens without a glare check. | Wide beams can help coverage but may expose the light source near pedestrian sightlines. | Compare lens angle, trim, and viewer position together. |
| Planning recess cuts before checking dimensions. | Ground fixtures need sleeve and access planning before paving work is fixed. | Confirm the final drawing, hole size, depth, and drainage path first. |
| Using one fixture style for every route condition. | Steps, turns, facade edges, and open walkway sections have different glare and spacing needs. | Use a route-by-route fixture schedule and confirm each zone separately. |
Does the current source package verify a named landmark project?
No. The available MA64 source package supports product-level details, but it does not verify a named landmark project record, installed quantity, route length, final model schedule, or control method. Use this page as a product and walkway-planning reference until approved project documents are provided.
Which MA64 lens angle should be compared first?
Start with the target. Narrower options such as 10 or 15 degrees suit focused accents, while 24 or 36 degrees can suit medium facade-edge tasks. Wider options such as 50 or 60 degrees can be reviewed for softer path orientation, but glare and spacing still need a site check.
When should anti-glare accessories be reviewed?
Review anti-glare accessories whenever pedestrians, drivers, guests, or cameras may see the fixture from close range. The source package shows several anti-glare forms, so trim and shield selection should be part of the early layout discussion.
What information helps confirm MA64 for a new project?
Send route drawings, paving material, target surfaces, viewer positions, desired lighting effect, trim preference, cable route, recess depth, drainage conditions, and document needs. These inputs help compare MA64 with other LED in-ground lights, facade wall-wash planning, and download resources.
Where should buyers compare related products?
Use the LED in-ground light category for recessed uplight options, compact flood and spot lights for above-ground projection alternatives, and contact Radiant Honor when a project file needs model comparison.