BTW - 16G wire will drop .05V at 3.6 amps over four feet. At 13 amps it drops .2V.What does everyone have against stranded wire? Stuff works great and is actually flexible to boot. I fail to see the negatives. Go 14g from the driver to the blocks and from block to block. Go 16g or 18g from the blocks to the strips. That will minimize any voltage loss on your wires and increase current, but I don't think it will be enough. You need a voltage adjustment that the A series drivers provides.
Quick question - where *exactly* in the circuit is that current/power meter's connections placed?
I've not had problems using 18g stranded. None. It works just as well in the connectors as solid core wire does. I simply strip 1/4 inch of the insulation, twist the strands tight so there are no strays and push it straight in as far as it will go.Stranded wire is fine as conductor, the problem they have is that the connectors on most strips require a 1mm thick solid core in a 2mm thick max wire.
But that wasn't what you said.Noone said it is impossible, I am just saying what the sockets were designed for.
Just to be clear - solid core is *recommended* but it is not *required*. Stranded does work just fine as long as you're not ham handed and munge it all up.the connectors on most strips require a 1mm thick solid core
LED Gardener has a bad design example posted?
Are those 4 far red strips in the same circuit?
Rut-Roh...The A series uses two internal adjustments, one for VOLTAGE and one for the current. The B series has no way to adjust voltage. Your strips need more voltage to get the current up. Disconnecting the pot wont do it. You need an A series driver. No other way around it.
No one driver will run all 10. A 320 driver is way too much for 3 strips. It's just the wrong driver. Completely unhooked, and at the driver leads it only puts out 23.99vdc and I can not adjust it. They are right in saying I need the A driver and not the B driver.I am correct in understanding each strip consumes 1.3a of power? If that is so, you will need a driver for each three or four strips it appears. t6ry connecting three strips in parallel and see what the output is. Amps are additive in parallel, and volts are additive in series. So if each strip is 13,300ma or 1.3A per strip and the driver produces 13 amps than ten would be max strips or nine not ten. try disconnecting one strip from the partallel wiring and use only nine strips, and you may see a significant improvement.
They have typ current as 1120mA but I believe max is 2500mA but either way the 320h driver on ten strips should roughly be 1300mA per strip I think. Jus doing it off the top of my head. Which just a tad above typ and not maxed out. I can run the hlg-480h-24a and get 400+ watts. But that' way too much for my tent. Even tho at @75% of max. The calculator shows a 480h driver for ten strips. If you drop to 8 strips it says use a 320h driver. But none the less the B type driver isn't right. I need an A type driver no matter which I go with.I am correct in understanding each strip consumes 1.3a of power? If that is so, you will need a driver for each three or four strips it appears. t6ry connecting three strips in parallel and see what the output is. Amps are additive in parallel, and volts are additive in series. So if each strip is 13,300ma or 1.3A per strip and the driver produces 13 amps than ten would be max strips or nine not ten. try disconnecting one strip from the partallel wiring and use only nine strips, and you may see a significant improvement.
If you think there is a good chance of that, then go with the 480.If I go with the 480H I can always add strips later on if I go bigger space.
Not wanting to open a can of worms on you... But have you thought about getting a 48A driver and setting them up in series of 2? 24 volts doesnt drive very many things people tend to use on this site but 48 volts seem to be a popular voltage in case you want to reuse your drivers at a later occasion. The hlg185-48A is adjustable up to 53 V i think which means you could drive 50V cobs aswell. 2 of them also gets you more than 320 bit less than 480 watts. YmmvIdk which driver to buy now. The HLG-320H-24A OR HLG-480H-24A and dim it down. If I go with the 480H I can always add strips later on if I go bigger space.
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Maybe they haven't done enough work with solid core to hate it yet, or done much with stranded to realize how superior it is to work with. Solid core is nice in that it will be bent to fit a shape, but man it sucks to work with... stranded for the win. You can strip/tin the stranded if you have trouble using those stupid wago connectors.What does everyone have against stranded wire? Stuff works great and is actually flexible to boot. I fail to see the negatives. Go 14g from the driver to the blocks and from block to block. Go 16g or 18g from the blocks to the strips. That will minimize any voltage loss on your wires and increase current, but I don't think it will be enough. You need a voltage adjustment that the A series drivers provides.
Quick question - where *exactly* in the circuit is that current/power meters connections placed?
Rut-Roh...
If I had to guess, I think you will be alright, as the EB series, needs slightly less voltage to fire than the Samsungs....Do I have an issue?
Wrong driver choice. Your strips aren't seeing enough voltage. The driver to use for parallel setups is the HLG-320H-24A. It allows both current and voltage to be adjusted.
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