Meanwell Driver Question-Amps etc

bestguy24

Active Member
Ladies and gents, I have a question...I finally built my first COB light. Used a 24"x8" heatsink, running qty 4 Vero 29's (3500k) wired in series. Driver is HLG-185c-1050B. Do not have dimmer...yet. PC fan cooling the heatsink. All is good, but when I hook up my watt meter I'm confused....It shows 171 watts, 116.7 volts at 1.462 Amps! I'm new to all this but I'm using a 1050 driver from meanwell.....shouldn't it be running 1.1 A? is something wrong or running higher then it should run? I just want to make sure that this is normal, maybe I'm just confused ? Thanks in advance for the help everyone!
 

stardustsailor

Well-Known Member
Ladies and gents, I have a question...I finally built my first COB light. Used a 24"x8" heatsink, running qty 4 Vero 29's (3500k) wired in series. Driver is HLG-185c-1050B. Do not have dimmer...yet. PC fan cooling the heatsink. All is good, but when I hook up my watt meter I'm confused....It shows 171 watts, 116.7 volts at 1.462 Amps! I'm new to all this but I'm using a 1050 driver from meanwell.....shouldn't it be running 1.1 A? is something wrong or running higher then it should run? I just want to make sure that this is normal, maybe I'm just confused ? Thanks in advance for the help everyone!
Capture.JPG
RTFR
(Read The Fuckin' Report* )

Almost all " 3in1 dimming" LED drivers from MeanWell do output more than the rated output current ...
Absolutely normal ,when you run the driver(s) with open (not connected ) the Dim+ / Dim- ....

* Top left between "Spec " & "Certificate" at the product datasheet page (pdf)..


Cheers.
:peace:
 
Last edited:

bestguy24

Active Member
Hello Sir, First of all, Thank you very much for looking this over and replying. I did actually look at the report but will admit, I get confused on the specs. . When it comes to power, volts, amps etc I really need to button down and study. I am easily confused by it all. I did understand it could run higher then rated but didn't think it would be THAT much higher!! I feel much better now though, that someone took a look and its normal. Now I can let it run and see how she does. Thanks again.
 

stardustsailor

Well-Known Member
I can say from personal experience that without a dimmer on my drivers they output more power than wide open on the pot.
That 's the reason I do not use pots anymore ...
Instead I use a 6 position rotary switch with 5 resistors ..
At the max (rotary switch at 6th /last position ) nothing is connected to the switch and the DIm inputs of the driver...
hid.JPG

Cheers.
 

bassman999

Well-Known Member
That 's the reason I do not use pots anymore ...
Instead I use a 6 position rotary switch with 5 resistors ..
At the max (rotary switch at 6th /last position ) nothing is connected to the switch and the DIm inputs of the driver...
View attachment 3588031

Cheers.
Thanks for that info, I was under the impression that open dimming circuit (as in the 6th position) would overdrive the driver and possibly cause shorter life.
I definitely dont need infinitely variable adjustment and agree that a few set points in enough
 

bestguy24

Active Member
I was looking to run around 1.1A for these 4 vero's, which is why I bought the 1050B driver. Guess I need to get a switch or pot to dial it down a bit. its essentially running at 1.4A.
 

bestguy24

Active Member
Yes its the AC Current I'm measuring....so, Damn....whats that mean then? That its drawing like 171 watts from wall and 1.4A. Does this mean its inefficient if its taking that many watts/Amps to power this setup?
 

bassman999

Well-Known Member
Yes its the AC Current I'm measuring....so, Damn....whats that mean then? That its drawing like 171 watts from wall and 1.4A. Does this mean its inefficient if its taking that many watts/Amps to power this setup?
You measure dc voltage output from the driver to the cobs
 

bestguy24

Active Member
Ok, Thanks guys. I need to buy a multi meter and check it out. I just used my killawatt meter to check watts/amps at the wall plug and figured if it showed watts/amps being drawn to the driver, that that's what I should be going by. I have a lot to learn!
 

guod

Well-Known Member
any driver regardless how it works transfers energie
energie is simple watts -
watt in this case is voltage x ampere in short(P= U x I)
just a simple Example
100W with a lossless Driver needs on the mainline 100 Volt and 1 Amp.
100V x 1A = 100W
on the other side of the driver we can now go for 200V and 0.5A
200V x 0.5A= 100W
or we can run 50 volts which gives now 2 Amps
50V x 2A = 100W

in your case we have 116V in and more then 144V (4 vero´s) out, and there is no driver without a loss.
the same driver in country(230V) would run at about 0.7Amps.
 
Top