Oregonhwy101
Active Member
Its going into a 4'deep 5feet long and 8 feet high ceiling with ac and c02 sealed room
Overkill ?Still overkill in my opinion. I have some 1/4" 3x3" blocks that I mount a cob to either side and can hang them anywhere. 1/8th is my choice now because of overall weight though.
I can get 1/4in 4 pieces at 6"x36" for around 40$
for low current applications thin metal works fine, see if you can find a restaurant supply house. my local one has 18x24 aluminum baking sheets for like $6. prob 16 GA but lots of surface area1/8th to 1/4 aluminum plate and good air circulation. Get it cut to size at local metal shop. $10-20 will get you a 18x24" sized panel to work with. You can drill some holes for mounting and wire runs, some thermal paste for the cobs and as long as you have good room air circulation, everything will be just fine.
For extra prettiness, you can polish the aluminum to make it shiny. I don't think the plants care though.
i think that profile is limited to somewhat low currents as the baseplate is thinner than the others. at least thats what i was told. 1050 mA sounds great though. 1400 prob ok. 1750 is getting up there for sureI use 12 CXB3590s at 1050mA, with 4 per 36" 4.85" heatsink from HeatsinkUSA. Attached a piece of L metal to both sides. boom done. (4.85" is the cheapest per cooling area by 27% )
I was going off just surface area calculations. I'm always going to run at low currents due to electrical costs, but I would love to hear the whys behind it if you have a sec. (or a link is fine too)i think that profile is limited to somewhat low currents as the baseplate is thinner than the others. at least thats what i was told. 1050 mA sounds great though. 1400 prob ok. 1750 is getting up there for sure
I thought about going baking sheet first, but it ended up being cheaper through the metal shop. They would work though.for low current applications thin metal works fine, see if you can find a restaurant supply house. my local one has 18x24 aluminum baking sheets for like $6. prob 16 GA but lots of surface area
i think that profile is limited to somewhat low currents as the baseplate is thinner than the others. at least thats what i was told. 1050 mA sounds great though. 1400 prob ok. 1750 is getting up there for sure
I mean, I'd love to see testing disproving the heatwatt/surface area for passive cooling. I don't know if you have the time,tools and inclination.
Thanks for the details, can you share some pictures of your lights?12 cobs, 3 rows of 4 configuration, 6" between cob centers. 1 driver per cob, 700ma dimmable, so under 50w each cob. Running it first with cheap chinese cobs to see how it handles the heat. So far so good, only 15 degrees delta between the surface temp and room at full wattage. Going to cram another 12 on in parallel to the existing cobs and see what I get.
I also retrofitted some chinese generics to run 6 Vero SE 29 C that uses the same 700ma drivers. The aluminum plate is 1/8th thick and 8x16" with 3 active 80mm PC fans. Measuring with a flir meter, I can get the tj point on the cobs to 74c at max power with the fans off. Normal running at 70%, the aluminum plate stabilizes at 2-3c over ambient with the tj point hitting 37-39c.
No heat problems whatsoever. You can feel more heat from the light with your hand than you can from the air coming out of the vents on the case. I think big bulky heat sinks are a dinosaur left over from when LEDs we driven hard. If you only plan on driving low, you don't need anything fancy since more of the energy is converted to light.
If you have some spare LEDs you can see for yourself. I am not quite confident in the way how heat sink requirements have been calculated here and people are going overboard and spending unnecessarily on big heat sinks. Glad I did because I was able to get twice as many cobs with the savings on heat sinks and using generic drivers.
Thanks for the details, can you share some pictures of your lights?
I was about to buy 3 of the 140mm heatsinks but $20 to ship 3 heatsinks is a bit much IMO.I'm always going to recommend RapidLED. Good customer service, fast shipping, good prices. Lowest on LEDs I've found, but I didn't comb the internet for cheaper pin heatsinks. I'm thinking it's still damn good pricing based on everything else, though. At the very least add it to your check list.