Products Description
For a 36W-class landscape spike spotlight, this page should be used as a project planning guide rather than a fixed specification sheet. The available customer material supports compact flood and spot lighting up to this class, garden spike lighting as a site family, and park or landscape spotlight planning for trees, sculptures and landscape features. Exact beam, colour setup, drive method, finish, mounting detail and project paperwork should be confirmed from drawings and requested configuration before quotation.
36W Landscape Spike Spotlight Planning Notes
| Project situation | How to use this page | Information still needed |
|---|---|---|
| Tree accent | Use the page to plan a stronger ground-positioned accent for trunks, canopy edges and planting groups. | Tree height, viewing side, fixture setback and shadow preference. |
| Sculpture or feature stone | Use it when the object needs more visual presence than a compact low-output garden accent. | Object size, surface texture, visitor route and main night-time face. |
| Path and garden border | Use it to compare controlled landscape accents near paths, lawns and planting beds. | Walking direction, glare-sensitive views, soil condition and cable route. |
| Facade-edge landscape | Use it where planting and architectural surfaces meet, such as entrance gardens or hotel courtyards. | Facade material, target distance, mounting access and finish preference. |
Where does a 36W-class landscape spike spotlight fit best?
This page fits projects that need a visible garden or landscape accent from a ground-positioned fixture. It can support trees, sculptures, planting groups, entrance gardens and facade-edge details when a compact accent is too restrained but a large projection fixture would be excessive. The final choice depends on target height, distance, viewing angle and surrounding brightness.
| Selection factor | Why it matters | Preferred project input |
|---|---|---|
| Target height | Taller objects need careful beam and setback planning to avoid a harsh lower section. | Tree, wall or sculpture height. |
| Fixture setback | Distance changes beam spread, shadow length and glare direction. | Plan mark-up or measured site photo. |
| Ground condition | Soil, lawn, planter and paved-edge conditions affect placement stability and cable routing. | Surface photo and installation note. |
| Viewing route | People may see the target from paths, terraces, windows or vehicle entries. | Main viewing angles and glare-sensitive points. |
How should tree and planting projects prepare for this page?
Tree and planting projects should identify the exact feature to be emphasized before selecting the fixture. A 36W-class spike spotlight can provide stronger presence for tree trunks, medium-height planting and garden focal points, but the layout should avoid direct eye-level glare and should leave enough room for aiming and maintenance access.
| Landscape target | Planning approach | Question to answer |
|---|---|---|
| Single tree | Place the accent so the trunk and lower canopy are visible from the main route. | Which side of the tree should become the main night-time view? |
| Planting group | Use the light to shape depth rather than flatten the whole bed. | Should the planting read as one mass or several layers? |
| Feature stone | Angle the beam to reveal texture and edge without washing out the shadow. | Where will people stand when viewing the feature? |
| Garden border | Keep the accent away from direct path glare while supporting wayfinding and visual rhythm. | Is the border meant to guide movement or highlight a feature? |
Can this route support facade-edge and hotel landscape accents?
Yes, when the required effect is local and landscape-oriented. This route can help plan entrance gardens, facade edges, small signage landscapes and hotel courtyard features. For long-distance projection, broad facade coverage or pole-mounted scenes, compare a stronger or differently mounted route before final selection.
| Use case | Good fit | Compare with |
|---|---|---|
| Entrance garden | Ground-positioned accent for planting, wall texture and arrival focus. | 36W square garden spotlight planning guide |
| Tree and sculpture feature | Medium-strength accent where the target needs clear night-time presence. | 24W garden spike light planning guide |
| Facade-edge planting | Landscape highlight near architectural surfaces, columns or entrance walls. | 36W outdoor spotlight planning guide |
| Longer landscape reach | Use this page as a checkpoint before moving into stronger spike-light routes. | 60W outdoor spike light planning guide |
What buyer inputs are needed before quotation?
The safest quotation path is to confirm the project conditions before treating the page as a final selection. Drawings, target photos and electrical notes help decide beam selection, mounting position, colour expectation, finish and operating setup without turning catalogue fragments into public defaults.
| Input | Why it affects selection | Useful format |
|---|---|---|
| Site drawing | Shows the target, setback, paths and cable route. | Plan, elevation or marked-up photo. |
| Target photo | Shows surface texture, surrounding brightness and glare-sensitive views. | Daytime photo and preferred night effect. |
| Mounting condition | Ground, planter and paved-edge positions need different placement planning. | Soil, lawn, planter, wall edge or custom base note. |
| Operating setup | Coordinates driver and control decisions with the wider project system. | Electrical note from the installer or project team. |
How does this page compare with nearby landscape spotlight pages?
Use this route when the design needs a ground-positioned 36W-class landscape accent. If the target is smaller, compare a 15W or 24W route. If the target is taller, farther away or part of a brighter exterior, compare the 60W spike-light route or a pole-mounted route before final selection.
| Page to compare | Best use | Decision cue |
|---|---|---|
| 15W garden and facade accent guide | Compact garden and facade details near the fixture. | Use when the target is small or the scene needs a quiet accent. |
| 24W garden spike light planning guide | Intermediate garden feature lighting with restrained presence. | Use when 36W-class output may be more than the scene needs. |
| 36W square garden spotlight planning guide | Similar output class with square garden-spike context. | Compare image, mounting and fixture form. |
| 60W pole-mounted landscape spotlight guide | Higher placement or stronger landscape projection. | Use when ground placement is not the preferred mounting approach. |
What should this public page avoid claiming?
This route should not be treated as a promise of one fixed outdoor rating, control protocol, colour-output mode, named component brand, approval-file status, availability term or service term. Those details belong in project confirmation because they depend on the requested configuration and supplied documents for a specific order.
Where can buyers continue after reviewing this 36W page?
Buyers can compare the related landscape spotlight pages above, review available files in the download center, or send drawings and target photos through the contact page. For broader browsing, the outdoor spotlight category keeps nearby garden, landscape and facade options together for comparison.