Hoping one off you more learned characters can help me with an aggravating fault I have with a DIY CXB3590 panel. I’ve had the last 2 cobs in series not light up twice now. Before I explain further I should probably give the spec.
Spec:
This panel is about a year & a half old & to date has operated as expected with no issues till now. It is 4 x CXB3590 Cd bin 3500k attached to a HLG-240-C1750B driver.
The cobs have never been driven over 40w each so it has not been pushed.
The heat-sink hits the minimum spec for passive cooling but has 5 x 120mm fans attached to it (I like to over engineer) so over heating should not be an issue.
The cob in the middle is on a separate driver so could not be causing the issue (Cannibalized from an old blurple I had left over).
Fault:
Last Friday when my lights were due to switch on, only the first 2 cobs in the series lit up. I unplugged them at the wall & had a fiddle with the wiring & just made sure everything was still solidly where it should be. Plugged back in & still no joy. The plug-in wattage meter also only showed the power draw at half of what I would expect. When turning the potentiometer up & down the wattage meter only displayed the wattage range you would expect for only 2 x cobs.
I unplugged it & went to get some tools. When I came back I thought I’ll try it one more time & low & behold all 4 fired up.
Today the same thing has happened but this time I could not get the cobs to light back up. Now I have an inkling that the power supply is at fault here but that is a best guess.
I have another HLG driver on a Samsung strip build I use for veg that also has the correct power output to power 4 x cobs so I thought, process of elimination. I’ll cut that power supply out & switch them over & see what happens.
Tested the existing power supply one more time before cutting the cable on the other power supply. Still no ball so I cut the cable on the HLG driver from my Samsung build. I guess in future I should invest in some sort of quick connect fittings of some sort.
Anyway, I was about to cut the existing HLG-240-C1750B out to put in the new driver & I thought I know what’s going to happen here, Murphy’s law will apply. I plugged in the power cable for the existing driver one more time just in case & all 4 cobs lit up perfectly. The wattage draw shown on the wattage meter is what I would expect for all 4 cobs running as normal.
So, I have no doubt this will happen again at some point but being intermittent this may be hard to diagnose.
It’s either the driver or the last 2 cobs in the series are starting to fail. I’m leaning towards the driver being the issue but like I said that is a best guess. Before I start buying replacement parts I would like to be a little surer of what is going on here.
Any help would be appreciated.
Before I go into what I would do if it were me troubleshooting,
Sometimes, power supplies can fail but only under load. They will show nominal voltage and current when tested with no dummy load. Doesn't happen very often this way though.
First, I would look for anything obvious, such as arc burns or a funny smell or melted or deformed plastic.
Then, I would check that the voltage output of my driver was correct. If it was not I would check that the input voltage was acceptable, if the input voltage was acceptable,
I would then test the wires and connectors which are used for low (less than 4, preferably 1 or 2 ohms) resistance while moving the wire around, if the resistance reading was jumpy then I would know I had a bad connection.
I would then repeat the this test point-to-point across all wires.
Then I would test for resistance from the LED array holder connection, to the pad on the LED array PCB, this reading should also be low or 0.
I would repeat that test for all LED arrays and holders. If I found one that was high, this would cause a lot of heat and maybe cause an array to fail or cause the power supply to shut down, this goes for any high impedance connection.
Then, I would use a diode test on all LED arrays (which is much too primitive to tell you that all of the diodes in the array are functional) to see if we had a "bad diode". Very limited information from doing this test but it's better than nothing.
Hope you find what's up with it.