Nope_49595933949
Well-Known Member
We are new to LED and indoor growing in general. Is it common for a company to push a meanwell driver 25% past the rated output of the driver? The driver in question is an HLG-120H-54A.
Pretty common for every light I’ve owned over the years. My old 240 boards are like 6 years old now all go up to 300w give or take 10wWe are new to LED and indoor growing in general. Is it common for a company to push a meanwell driver 25% past the rated output of the driver? The driver in question is an HLG-120H-54A.
Oh ok. Does it effect the efficiency?Pretty common for every light I’ve owned over the years. My old 240 boards are like 6 years old now all go up to 300w give or take 10w
The efficiency graphs only go to 100%. It certainly won't help the lifespan!Oh ok. Does it effect the efficiency?
see if anyone catches this …. Good 1 …. Instead of it’s one louder , it’s one brighter …
Thanks for breaking it down.there is a isolation transformer in every meanwell driver.
going over 100% will make this transofrmer warm/hot, especially if youre on 115V (twice the A to 230V).
this will become the bottleneck of your efficacy.
Or blow the tent exhaust on it.Running a 4" pc /fridge fan on it , the cooler the better, I've found
Flip your fan around if it’s blowing and not suckingOr blow the tent exhaust on it.
An exhaust fan doesn't do both? My fan draws from the carbon filter and the exhaust blows over the external driver.Flip your fan around if it’s blowing and not sucking
in the case of constant current, b type drivers thats right.The Meanwell drivers have built in over current, voltage and temperature protection. The driver will go into safe mode and not operate much past their rated specs.