Delta-9Pyromaniac
Well-Known Member
I have the hot glue ready. How do I wire and ground that. Do I need a driver? What do I need?
999lumens for 50W
the 23W spiral CFLs I like using for seedling and young vegers are circa 1100lm
THose look like shit hey.
999lumens for 50W
the 23W spiral CFLs I like using for seedling and young vegers are circa 1100lm
Wow. Looked right over that
N2Fg, I'm going to build a 175w light for a 1x1 space (head room no issue as such) and wanted to use 16 x cree 1512 3000k 93cri because they will run perfectly at 10w each, @18v will only require 1 x driver and will be 200w max for $200.There are 18V and 9V (2 in series) such as:
Cree CXA1512 & CXB1310
Citizen CLU701
Bridgelux V8
The supplies will automatically adjust down to the forward voltage. The HLG can additionally be adjusted down to improve efficiency.
You could use a current balancing circuit to drive multiple CoBs in parallel with one supply. Without current balancing, the CoBs would run imbalanced and thermal runaway is a real possibility. I have attached a couple of app notes that explain the parallel issues.
I wouldn't.Four 110v driverless LED's, four 12v PC fans. How would I hook this up?
I appreciate the response but unfortunately with no experience I have no clue how to do that...? Not sure if I'm even going through with this set up. Thinking of getting luminus cxm22 gen3 90 cri with passive heatsinks. Problem is, because of my lack of experience I don't know what size driver to use.. Can you brake it down in layman's terms so someone with no experience like me can understand?I wouldn't.
Ground the fixture and use a ground fault interrupter. A fuse wouldn't hurt.
Drivers are usually grouped by power output in watts. You need to decide if you want to drive your arrays with either a parallel or series circuit. Once you have decided on the chip you want to use and how hard you want to run each chip that will allow you to choose the driver current for series or forward voltage for parallel. Parallel circuits divide the current equally(hopefully...) between all of the chips in circuit(ie. 300w divided by 6 chips=50w/chip Say the chip has a forward voltage of 50v so it will use 1A of the available current from the driver(300W@50V= 6A total current available)). When running parallel driver you also need to make sure that if a cob fails that the remaining cobs can handle the additional power. I run my Vero's in series-makes certain that all of the arrays see the same drive current-downside is higher voltage, especially when running hi wattage drivers.I appreciate the response but unfortunately with no experience I have no clue how to do that...? Not sure if I'm even going through with this set up. Thinking of getting luminus cxm22 gen3 90 cri with passive heatsinks. Problem is, because of my lack of experience I don't know what size driver to use.. Can you brake it down in layman's terms so someone with no experience like me can understand?
Exactly. Specially considering you can do those numbers with store bought led light bulbs with the diffusers removed for about a buck a bulb.Most of their lights are under 100lm/W. A waste of time and money.
https://www.rollitup.org/t/can-700-watts-of-led-strips-grow-trees.946736/You need more than 40 of the fuckers to come close to a 400W's lumen output.