NoFucks2Give
Well-Known Member
You've got a lot to learn. It is very rare for a linear driver to outperform a switcher. A current limiting resistor cannot beat a buck step down constant current driver., to enlighten those still in the dark about linear driven COBs please watch these two videos:
There is a big loss in this chip for the AC/DC converter. Efficient AC/DC converters are expensive. Low current AC/DC converters are very difficult to design efficiently.
12V is an inefficient voltage compared to 48V. Look at any series of power supplies the 12V will always be less efficient than the 48V.
30 watt converters are less efficient than 600W. Look at the specs.
I only use voltages below 50V to circumvent electrical safety code.
The Chinese are not known for making quality LEDs. They are in serious financial trouble because no reputable light manufacturer will buy Chinese LEDs. This can be verified in the LED trade press.
The cost of electricity is more important than the cost of the chip. I guarantee you will be paying more in electricity than you need to if you had done the design correctly.
The amount of electricity you could save would more than pay for the more expensive LEDs.
Copper water blocks would have worked twice as good as aluminum. A CoB mounted to a thin copper plate which is mounted to a copper water pipe is a very inexpensive and effective heatsink.
Why is a vaiac so big? Because they can get very hot. This means they are inefficient. They are inefficient with small currents when they do not get hot too.
Your most efficient way to power a set of CoBs is to have one DC constant voltage power supply driving individual Buck step down LED drivers. The DC supply voltage should be set at just little bit over the CoB's forward voltage. The buck driver must be a switcher (NOT linear) the inductor should have minimum resistance, the switching FET should have very low "on state" forward voltage.
Lumens mean NOTHING. The only criteria for evaluation a grow light is how many photons are you getting to the plant's leaf per wall watt in. This does NOT mean a fixture with high wall watts is a good thing. Low wall watts with lots of irradiant photons (e.g. µmol/m²/s) is what you want. It is also what you do not currently have.
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