Products Description
96W Square Spotlight | Large Facade Planning Guide
This 96W square spotlight page is written as a planning guide for facade, site, monument and landscape projection projects. It keeps the square-body product identity while avoiding unsupported fixed promises.
Use this page to prepare the application notes that a lighting designer, project buyer or purchasing team should confirm before a formal quotation. Final configuration should be checked against drawings, target distance, mounting method, color-output needs and wiring plans.
Quick Planning Snapshot
| Planning item | Use this page to confirm |
|---|---|
| Product role | 96W class square spotlight for facade, site and landscape projection work. |
| Output level | Stronger square projection class for larger facade, site and landscape accent scenes. |
| Body style | Square housing style for projects that prefer a geometric fixture appearance. |
| Mounting | Confirm bracket, base, surface and aiming direction before quotation. |
| Color output | Confirm single-color or color-changing requirement by project. |
| Control method | Confirm switching, dimming or project-control wiring from drawings. |
Where This Square Spotlight Fits
The 96W class is useful when a project needs stronger projection than small garden spotlights while keeping a clean square fixture form. Typical planning scenes include building facades, monuments, landscape focal points, entrance walls, signage zones and public-space accent areas.
For close-range decorative scenes, compare lower-output square garden spotlights. For broader or longer-distance lighting, compare larger floodlight families instead of forcing a single page into every application.
Selection Factors Before Quotation
| Factor | Why it matters | Buyer note |
|---|---|---|
| Beam angle | Controls whether the effect is a tight highlight or wider surface coverage. | Share target distance and surface width. |
| Mounting surface | Affects bracket choice, aiming direction and cable route. | Share drawings, photos or installation height. |
| Color output | Different projects may need warm, neutral, cool or color-changing output. | Confirm the intended visual effect before pricing. |
| Control plan | Switching, dimming and coordinated project control change the electrical plan. | Confirm the site-control method with the designer. |
| Outdoor exposure | Rain, irrigation, dust and maintenance access affect fixture selection. | Describe the actual installation environment. |
Application Planning Examples
| Scene | Planning focus |
|---|---|
| Building facade | Target height, beam spread, glare direction and mounting line. |
| Landscape feature | Object size, distance, aiming direction and finish color preference. |
| Entrance or signage zone | Uniformity, shadow control, nearby pedestrian view and cable route. |
| Public-space accent | Fixture placement, project-control method and maintenance access. |
How to Compare With Related Pages
Use lower-output square garden spotlight pages for close decorative work. Use this square spotlight page when the project needs a stronger geometric fixture for facade or site projection. Use larger high-power floodlight pages only when the surface, distance and coverage area justify a larger class.
| Compare with | When it may fit better |
|---|---|
| Lower-output square garden spotlights | Small walls, planting beds, courtyards and subtle feature accents. |
| Round or compact spotlights | Projects that prefer a smaller visual profile or different mounting style. |
| Base-mounted floodlight pages | Sites that need non-square forms or stronger bracket-led mounting choices. |
| High-power floodlight pages | Large surfaces, long-throw projection or wider exterior coverage. |
Information to Send With an Inquiry
For faster technical review, send the application scene, fixture quantity estimate, target surface, beam preference, mounting location, color-output requirement, control method, voltage preference and any project drawings. This helps confirm whether the square spotlight page is the right starting point or whether another product family is more suitable.
| Project file | Helpful detail |
|---|---|
| Scene photo or drawing | Shows the target surface, mounting point and aiming direction. |
| Target distance | Helps compare beam spread and brightness needs. |
| Visual effect note | Clarifies whether the goal is a narrow highlight, clean accent or wider coverage. |
| Electrical plan | Helps confirm voltage preference and control wiring. |
Can this square spotlight be used for facade and site projection?
Yes, it can be considered for both scene types when the target distance, beam angle, mounting position and visual effect are suitable. Final selection should be checked from the project layout rather than from the product title alone.
Is color-changing output the default for this page?
No. Treat color output as a project option to confirm. Many exterior projects use single-color output, while some public or event-oriented scenes may request color-changing effects.
Should the control method be fixed before quotation?
Yes. The control method affects wiring, accessories and quotation details. Share whether the project needs simple switching, dimming or a coordinated lighting-control plan.
What mounting information should be prepared?
Prepare the installation surface, aiming direction, approximate height, cable route and whether the fixture needs bracket, base or custom mounting support.
How should buyers choose beam angle?
Use narrower beams for focused accents and wider beams for broader surfaces. The right choice depends on target size, throw distance and the effect the designer wants to create.
When should a different floodlight class be considered?
Consider a different class when the surface is much smaller, much larger, unusually close or unusually far from the planned mounting point. A site drawing or lighting layout helps compare options.
What should be confirmed before placing an order?
Confirm product role, beam angle, mounting, color output, control method, voltage preference, outdoor exposure, finish color and project drawings before moving from selection to quotation.