churchhaze
Well-Known Member
SMASH THEM!Fuck t5 or CFL for any purpose
https://www.rollitup.org/t/smashing-fluorescent-lamps.864130/
SMASH THEM!Fuck t5 or CFL for any purpose
Nah this a cluttered build. Just have your driver's be remote. Luckiky, at 30 watts, an hlg 320-700-1050 will be able to run A BUNCH of those smaller veros. You honestly probably only need 2 or 3. The way that is buily, series wiring would be beautiful. Just get a riveted frim harbor freight, an electrician drill, and a pack of good drill bits the size you'll use to rivet and build that frame. Just get a couple new hack saw blades and angle aluminum cuts like butter. Dont let that intimidate you.I still think with only 2ft of height you want 72 light sources instead of 5 or 10.
Jesus I am going to have nightmares about building that. I am such a poser.
It was pretty straight forward once I had a plan, but the decision to go with a driver per cob was not a good one, cost and efficiency could have been better.Jesus I am going to have nightmares about building that. I am such a poser.
It means 0.6 amps times whatever your (fv) is of the leds. Which is around 3 volts. So you'll get 1.6ish watts from each. You could run more like 13-14 on itIm confused by amps/volts etc.
say I have this driver
https://www.fasttech.com/products/1612/10008212/1734701
CURRENT OUTPUT 0.6±5% A
OUTPUT TYPE DC 21-40V
POWER CONSUMPTION 20 W
Does that mean I can hook 10 of these up and they'll take 2 watts each.
http://www.cree.com/LED-Components-and-Modules/Products/XLamp/Discrete-Directional/XLamp-XPE
Totally confused.
Im confused by amps/volts etc.
say I have this driver
https://www.fasttech.com/products/1612/10008212/1734701
CURRENT OUTPUT 0.6±5% A
OUTPUT TYPE DC 21-40V
POWER CONSUMPTION 20 W
Does that mean I can hook 10 of these up and they'll take 2 watts each.
http://www.cree.com/LED-Components-and-Modules/Products/XLamp/Discrete-Directional/XLamp-XPE
Totally confused.
This is actually an easy one. That Physiospec spectrum looks 80 CRI 3500-4000K, just grab some Samsung strips from Digikey or some of these bad boys: http://www.cutter.com.au/proddetail.php?prod=cut3021
You get the idea. And some heatsinks from heatsinkusa.com. The 2.079" profile should be good.
Samsungs, they make a lot of different choices, but three of these per 3ft bar might work: http://www.digikey.com/product-detail/en/samsung-semiconductor-inc/SI-B8T114280WW/1510-1334-ND/5958893
Either way, figuring out how much light you are shooting for how many watts you need is a good start.
Yeah, these look great when you see 180+ lm/W, but that may be because they running at 5W instead of 11W with the same leds. It looks like they are built same LM561B+ leds they use in their latest strips, just at less current per LED.Samsung just released a new version of these strips I think.
http://www.samsung.com/global/business/led/products/led-engine/ambient-light-engine
http://www.samsung.com/global/business/business-images/led/file/product/products/201608/Data_Sheet_H_Series_GEN3_EU_Rev.1.2.pdf
heatsink yea. ballasting noAh, I see, thanks Jorge.
OK so I've been following links and reading threads and i think I know enough to attempt a build.
Here's my thought process
I want about 60 watts of super effective light in a 3 x 1 space.
I go to cutter and find 12" strips with 15 xp-g3. The data sheet of the xpg3 says they pull ~2watts at 700 amps to give me 30 watts. 2 of these with a 6" gap in the middle will be perfect. Max amps is 2, so I'm assuming nice super hands are possible at .7.
Now I need a driver. Back to the data sheet to see I need 2.83 volts at .7 amp, so I need 15 * 2.83 * 2 = ~85v. to power 2 strips in series
My criteria for a driver is 7.amps , 60 wats and 85 volts.
I find this dimmable meanwell driver on mouser
http://www.mouser.ie/ProductDetail/Mean-Well/HVGC-65-700B/?qs=sGAEpiMZZMt5PRBMPTWcaVMM//lzUOtqsk4PQyAdYWVql/972xJp4w==
HVGC-65-700B
Output Current-Channel 1: 700 mA
Output Voltage-Channel 1: 9 V to 93 V
Output Power: 65.1 W
For a heatsink/frame I go to heatsinkusa and get 32 " x 3" piece. The strips are stuck to the heatsink using thermal paste and some of that special brown tape growmau5 demos in his tutorial. From here on its electrical lego. I hook up the two strips in series and the driver using wago connectors. Attach a plug and I'm done.
Is that a sensible way to approach a build?
This sounds greateach led is 2.83 volts .7amps or 700mA? . you could put 36 LEDs in series and ballast with an AC capacitor in series with HOT and rectify the output. 100uf to 200uF will do as long as it can handle 120vac minimum.
i mean you're about to do some heavy wiring already. why spend 120$ on a ballast when you can build one for 15$ out of 3 parts
looks like the samsung strip lights have a much higher efficiency than those fastech creesi would advise you go to fasttech.com and pick up any of the super cheap 5 packs of crees they have in like 4000-7000k
https://www.fasttech.com/products/1609/10001905/4963102-cree-xp-g2-r5-1a-586lm-6500k-led-emitter-5-pack
if u wanna get fancy u can do some of these
https://www.fasttech.com/products/1609/10007033/2119704-cree-xp-e-460-470nm-blue-led-emitter-on-20mm-base
then i would mount those on a cheap aluminium u profile(as a heatsink) or if u wanna spend on heatsinks you can but ive used monos on aluminium channel fine
and you can attacth it with the stickie things they have
https://www.fasttech.com/products/1506/10004569/1350301
you wont use optics or anything like that
you could run these off a cheap driver like
https://www.fasttech.com/products/1612/10008212/1734701
or get some APC mean well drivers also cheaply
basically what @Growmau5 is suggesting
google transformerless power supplies and you will find all the information you need to build one of these simple driversThis sounds great
"build one for 15$ out of 3 parts"
I dont totally understand all of this...
"ballast with an AC capacitor in series with HOT and rectify the output. 100uf to 200uF will do as long as it can handle 120vac minimum."
These are the bits I'm struggling with.
ballast with an AC capacitor in series
HOT
rectify the output
100uf to 200uF
120vac
I use them to power 12 volt fans and a experimental led side light I built. the formulas on google are pretty easy to understandid hate to get someone hurt by only describing it over some forum chat.