And keep in mind that :
Mr. Flux, could you provide a link or two? Also, for those of us who might get mixed up, we need to make note whether we're talking about a driver for the COBs or a PS for the fans. Both have been discussed in this thread and it's getting a little confusing.The power supply of the fans is a single point of failure in the COB + CPU cooler design. Why on earth would you go cheap on that. Something good from Mean Well is just a few bucks more.
Mello that is a good catch, the PLN is not suitable as a fan driver. There must be another adjustable constant voltage meanwell driver but I can't find it.Mr. Flux's post #22 has me confused, because he mentions three different electrical devices, but two of them (APV-16 series and LPV-20 series) appear to be FAN recommendations, and one of them (PLN-20) appears to be a COB recommendation???
Adding redundancy is one way, another way is to make the system intrinsically meltdown-proof by overdimensioning the heatsinks.If you're gonna try to bomb-proof your cooling, the best way to make that part of the system significantly more disaster-proof would be to provide redundancy. Two fans per heatsink, powered by separate power supplies.
Yes, absolutely, I shoulda mentioned that. That might be the most expensive upfront, but most reliable in the long run, eh?Adding redundancy is one way, another way is to make the system intrinsically meltdown-proof by overdimensioning the heatsinks.
Where's that stupid "rep" thing ?Adding redundancy is one way, another way is to make the system intrinsically meltdown-proof by overdimensioning the heatsinks.
OK, yes, they're all switching supplies, but I'm just trying to keep it simple. For those of us who aren't as well versed as you and Mr. Flux and Supra and etc.Same 'rules' discussed, apply for both Constant Voltage or Constant Current Switching Power Supplies.
It can be a plug voltage regulator,a led driver,an ATX power supply ,or whatever else whatever that fits the descriptionof a "Switching Power Supply Unit " .
OK, yes, they're all switching supplies, but I'm just trying to keep it simple. For those of us who aren't as well versed as you and Mr. Flux and Supra and etc.
Constant Voltage (or adjustable voltage would be even better) for providing power to fans, and Constant Current for LED drivers, yes?
BTW, I have no idea what that silvery "Plinius" thing in your pictures above does, but it looks really cool and I want one
Description: Solid-state, two-channel power amplifier with an output stage that can be operated in either class-A or class-A/B. Maximum output power (both channels driven, 20Hz–20kHz, at <0.05% THD): 125Wpc into 8 ohms (21dBW), 220Wpc into 4 ohms (20.4dBW); switched to bridged mono mode, 400W into 8 ohms (26dBW), 730W into 4 ohms (25.6dBW). Frequency response: 20Hz–20kHz, ±0.2dB, 0dB at 1Hz and –3dB at 70kHz. Distortion: typically <0.05% THD at rated power, 0.1% THD and IM worst case prior to clipping. Current output: 50A short-duration peak per channel. Input impedance: 47k ohms. Voltage gain: RCA inputs, 32dB; balanced inputs, 38dB. Power/Current consumption: 485W/2.1A, class-A Idle. 92W/0.4A class-A/B Idle/Standby.
Dimensions: 19.75" (500mm) W by 8.75" (220mm) H by 18" (455mm) D. Weight: 83 lbs (38kg).
Serial Number Of Unit Reviewed: 5803.
Price: $7830. Approximate number of dealers: 27.
Manufacturer: Plinius Audio Ltd., 1 Tanner Street, Woolston, PO Box 19531, Christchurch 8241, New Zealand. Tel: (64) 3-982-4766. Fax: (64) 3-982-4764. Web: www.pliniusaudio.nzld.com.
US distributor: Elite Audio/Video Distribution, 1027 N. Orange Drive, Los Angeles, CA 90038. Tel: (800) 457-2577, (323) 466-9694. Web: www.eliteavdist.com.
http://www.stereophile.com/content/plinius-audio-sa-103-power-amplifier
Arduino ($30 ) + Thermistors( Nx $1)` + Solid State Relay ($30 )The fan power supply's I've been using are from my old lights I bought. All the same..small cheaply built looking...plastic encased from china. So far they have been running for years with no problem.
What's funny is I never see anything like it for sale anywhere!? Seems to be missing from the market for some odd reason. They are nice since so small..
As far as cob protection. I'm going to copy the setup from the gehl light. When I first bought the light brand new it would shutdown after 15 minutes. Then restart after it cooled. Then shutdown again. It was overheating...brand new.
The thermostat in it was shutting it down. Was very effective at saving the leds. I harvested the thermostat...put it in the light I'm using now. Safe to say I'll be putting it in all future builds until I find a better way.
They go on the ac side of the drivers though. Would be hard to implement in a remote driver setup.
Got a photo of your fan power supply(s)?What's funny is I never see anything like it for sale anywhere!? Seems to be missing from the market for some odd reason. They are nice since so small..
Getting there slowly sds. After I finish this light I'm working on, I'll have basically one on standby. I'll try implementing that in the next project..will need to read your arduino thread a few more times..lolArduino ($30 ) + Thermistors( Nx $1)` + Solid State Relay ($30 )
That looks perfect. Just needs a plug or connected to an ac inlet.It's starting to get above my head would a Mean Well APV-16-12 work for me?
for 2 fans
Hey tk these guy's giving you advice are LED Gurus. They helped me and if I can doit, almost anyone can. Good luckThanks guys, I'm doing my home work to build a diy cxa3050 2700k cob light, hempy bucket cabinet grow.
P/S I'm in no big hurry to build, just trying to get it together. I had a stroke 3 years ago so everything I do is slow!! So slow