Hybridway
Well-Known Member
Lotts of laughs for days! That's perfect!Everybody Knows The Word
Can't argue with the word!!! Lmfao!!!!
Lotts of laughs for days! That's perfect!Everybody Knows The Word
sure glad I didn't have to inhale those crabsI rubbed neem oil all over my man bits, it cured my crabs. fucking Tijuana
Great idea! Never seen that, only full shut-down, which is good but not as good as your way that's for sure. Homeostatic dimmer.@Hybridway I don't really have enough time to take all the ideas from my brain and make them a reality. If that ever changes, sure Ill build some lights for sale.
building budget lights for profit does not interest me. I could see myself taking orders for custom CNC, laser, or waterjet designs with integrated controllers and shit. Something that would keep me engaged mentally and not be too repetitive like hand building 4 cobs bars. There are guys doing that cheaper, better, faster than I ever could.
I do have some ideas to cash in on the people that watch my videos tho. None are production ready, but they are all small diy items designed to help people, not necessarily to get rich off of.
-one idea that I have working right now is a tiny arduino that connects to your driver's dimming leads with simple wire bite connectors. the sketch/program just runs like this
82F or lower = 100% power to the driver 10-11v output
84F = 9v or 90%
85F =8v or 80%
etc etc the idea is to create what I call a Homeostatic dimmer. room gets hot, leds dim, room /AC starts to cool down, led intensity increases. Much better solution than just a high temp cut off that people are paying $40 for.
$12 in parts, 30mins to assemble by hand, no adjustment functionality, and no manual dimming override yet.
This is a really cool idea - basically what I do manually everyday in my hot climate lol@Hybridway I don't really have enough time to take all the ideas from my brain and make them a reality. If that ever changes, sure Ill build some lights for sale.
building budget lights for profit does not interest me. I could see myself taking orders for custom CNC, laser, or waterjet designs with integrated controllers and shit. Something that would keep me engaged mentally and not be too repetitive like hand building 4 cobs bars. There are guys doing that cheaper, better, faster than I ever could.
I do have some ideas to cash in on the people that watch my videos tho. None are production ready, but they are all small diy items designed to help people, not necessarily to get rich off of.
-one idea that I have working right now is a tiny arduino that connects to your driver's dimming leads with simple wire bite connectors. the sketch/program just runs like this
82F or lower = 100% power to the driver 10-11v output
84F = 9v or 90%
85F =8v or 80%
etc etc the idea is to create what I call a Homeostatic dimmer. room gets hot, leds dim, room /AC starts to cool down, led intensity increases. Much better solution than just a high temp cut off that people are paying $40 for.
$12 in parts, 30mins to assemble by hand, no adjustment functionality, and no manual dimming override yet.
As usual when people want to inflate led efficiency, they use these useless PPFD comparisons. Hang a Gavita Pro 1m high in a room with no reflective walls and see how little light falls on the 4ftx4ft square right under the lamp. Low and behold that's not even half of the light you see in a growtent from these fixtures. Completely useless test and pretty much an utter lie to even suggest it carries any meaning.i just cant wrap my head around pg 16 of that study
ok i see that the cree design edges the gavita in PPF/W at 1.82 vs 1.72, less than 10% better
so how in the heck do they replace the PPFD of 1000W with only 500W of LED?
what am i missing here? i could see if they were comparing lumens to PPFD or something and heavily weighting the better spectrum but going from PPF to PPFD should be a straightforward application without spectral bias (unless the gavita is throwing 50% of its light outside of the 4x4 and they dont count it? which aint a fair fight in an overlapping warehouse scenario)
I have Gavita hortistar at 1150.9w (457.8 radiant watts)As usual when people want to inflate led efficiency, they use these useless PPFD comparisons. Hang a Gavita Pro 1m high in a room with no reflective walls and see how little light falls on the 4ftx4ft square right under the lamp. Low and behold that's not even half of the light you see in a growtent from these fixtures. Completely useless test and pretty much an utter lie to even suggest it carries any meaning.
Indeed, you need to look at their actual PPF figures. Gavita Pro gives 1.6umol/s on the plants (after reflector losses and wall losses). Those Cree leds apparently produce 1.93umol/s after lens losses and assuming only 5% wall losses you'd be left with something like 1.83umol/s/W in a real world application. So at best you can expect 12.5% power savings with those horticulture leds at the power levels used in this test. Everything else is just because of a poorly designed test.
We run our CXB cobds to achieve 2.3 to 2.5umol/s/W. So that's much more efficient and we indeed end up with large power savings.
University of Utah, lolI have Gavita hortistar at 1150.9w (457.8 radiant watts)
1.514 µmol/J , 39.8% efficient with a new reflector, new bulb.
univ of Utah sphere.
As seen in that white paper, Cree measured it at 1.72umol/J in their sphere. There were two more of those tests done by other universities and one came out at 1.75umol/J and the other (flat plane integration) at 1.8mol/s at 1000W. Growershouse also shows a test coming out at 1.7umol/J.I have Gavita hortistar at 1150.9w (457.8 radiant watts)
1.514 µmol/J , 39.8% efficient with a new reflector, new bulb.
univ of Utah sphere. edit: utah state univ.
Wall losses get bigger when there's an aisle instead. Those are just giant light holes nothing is ever reflected back from.As seen in that white paper, Cree measured it at 1.72umol/J in their sphere. There were two more of those tests done by other universities and one came out at 1.75umol/J and the other (flat plane integration) at 1.8mol/s at 1000W. Growershouse also shows a test coming out at 1.7umol/J.
Gavita tested a 1000W in a 2m2 tent and came out at 1.6umol/Js average including wall losses. Which makes sense since they also claim something like 10% wall losses.
That's massive evidence supporting the 1.7+umol/J figure and as the scientific approach dictates, the outliers will be scrapped.
Then I have my own grow results using a 1000W Gavita Pro. If I use the 1.6umol/J figure for the Gavita and estimate wall losses at 5% for my Cree COB fixture, I come out at pretty much the same g/umol ratio for both these lights.
Lucky you, but not lucky- or even accurate- for those with open floor plans and aisles.Indeed.
You don't have aisles inside an Ulbricht sphere though
Neither do I in my grow tent or Gavita in theirs. So I'm lucky that I can simply use those figures and don't waste light on floors.
Well then they should use tables on wheels and close those aisles when not needed.Lucky you, but not lucky- or even accurate- for those with open floor plans and aisles.
While this is true it's not a complete picture. Just like actually getting traction on the road, all the lighting horsepower in the world does no good if it isn't hitting the intended target.Well then they should use tables on wheels and close those aisles when not needed.
This is not relevant for PPF figures anyway. The measurements you get from an Ulbricht integration sphere show how much light the fixture emits.
fyi the hortistar is specifically the reflector part. Unless you actually wanted to imply you hooked it up to something else than a gavita pro fixture.I have Gavita hortistar at 1150.9w (457.8 radiant watts)
1.514 µmol/J , 39.8% efficient with a new reflector, new bulb.
univ of Utah sphere. edit: utah state univ.
And as if that wasn't enough, it makes better buds with more frost.In my opinion absolutely, just the heat factor alone is incredible I have panels of cxb 3070's, vero 29's and 2 panels of vero 10's I couldn't be more impressed with the lights. Plus all 4 lights run on the same circuit its un real how low the power consumption is plus passive cooling means I simply put a fan on and you can touch the back of where the led is mounted for as long as you like. I couldn't speak highly enough of cob leds I really really love my vero 10 panels and so does every single plant that has been under it.