I had to look that up..lol.Inventronics has several drivers that are wonky. But usually expensive, Stardustsailor did a big write up a while ago on Driver companies.
I will search around for it.......
this would be the first time i built a light but not my first time wiriing circuts and soldering. im studying to be an engineer and what better practice than to build one.I would start with a low voltage option first. Sounds like your still new to this. High voltage will require some experience and skill. Justmy advice..I wouldn't tell a friend to go high voltage on his first build.....unless he was an electrician. Seen way too many exposed and loose wiring on here...
Get some arctic 11 CPU coolers and run them on a affordable 1.4a driver, 50w each. Put them in some sort of frame or case if you want them organized or just enjoy the spread with them solo. 2' heat sinks are a nice option as they serve as the frame and somewhere to mount things. 200w or 4 CxA 3070 at 1.4a on a 2' sink would run really cool with a fan...and probably survive a fan breakdown.
Lots of design ideas in this led forum..
I had to look that up..lol.
wonky
weird, whacked out, messed up, not working for no definable reason. Usually applied to technology.
"Dude, you have the wonkiest computer in the world. I walked through the room and it crashed."
Can't complain...every one I've bought is still working and dimmable... But if I buy anymore I'll probably go to a more affordable meanwell...maybe..hehe
Is there an issue with running them in series?thanks for the replies. i couldnt find any info on brightstar led drivers. it looks like i can have it customized for 5 seperate outputs. i really would like to avoid buying a driver for eaxh led.
ive looked through pos thread that is what gave me the idea. Can I put more than 38v into the cxa3070 if the current is 1.4a? If I can't that is my only issue with running series, needing to buy more leds/heatsinks. I would like to maximize watts and minimize LEDs/heatsinks. I'm content with running 350w and up.Is there an issue with running them in series?
I would check out positivity's build, since he is running multiple cobs together off single high voltage sources. The Meanwell 185's and the Inventronix competition is certainly able.....Is there an issue with running them in series?
I would check out positivity's build, since he is running multiple cobs together off single high voltage sources. The Meanwell 185's and the Inventronix competition is certainly able.....
There are few high voltage sources without spending an assload quickly and even fewer multiple parallel sources.
DIY IC driver is another option......
There are few high voltage sources without spending an assload quickly and even fewer multiple parallel sources.
DIY IC driver is another option......
These will run a single CXA chip up to 1.95A......Meanwell HLP-80H-42
http://www.meanwell.com/search/HLP-80H/HLP-80H-spec.pdf
You can use the Meanwell HLG-185 to run 4 Cxa chips in a series, but I believe 1050 mA is the max? Maybe 1400mA.
Inventronics has several drivers that are wonky. But usually expensive, Stardustsailor did a big write up a while ago on Driver companies.
I will search around for it.......
i looked at this post again and it seems getting the 80w 36v driver is the most cost effecient option short of getting one huge cheap driver.
i think i will get 4 of those drivers 2 5000k and 2 3000k. what do you think about those spectrums? the lights and drivers would be ~300. it would also be easy to upgrade.
yeah i also want to veg with it. is the dimmer on the driver, if so is there a way to make it externalk?That sounds like a good plan. It will run pretty hot at 1.9a so the dimmer may come in handy. I'd probably just go 3000k if it's for flowering. Unless you w ant to veg with it too then it may be a good addition...would be a flexible spectrum.
I've never used an arctic 11 but I've read they handle 1.8a well so it should be good.yeah i also want to veg with it. is the dimmer on the driver, if so is there a way to make it externalk?
one more question will the extra amps make the cpu cooler insuficintk?
Is there a max voltage for the cxa3070? I can only find the max watts. You are giving me lots of good info. ThanksThis would be the cased version..
http://pge.powergatellc.com/product_info.php/products_id/5122
The (A) version is internally dimmable with multimeter. The (B) version externally by 10v or resistor.
Is there a max voltage for the cxa3070? I can only find the max watts. You are giving me lots of good info. Thanks
does the life shorten running at the max volts like it does running max power?The data sheets are your friend..
http://www.cree.com/LED-Components-and-Modules/Landing-pages/CXA
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Yes..."max power" = quantum and radiometric efficiency/ outputdoes the life shorten running at the max volts like it does running max power?
I'm not really following you.Yes..."max power" = quantum and radiometric efficiency/ output
Though, it is NOT at max, when running maximum voltage/ wattage.....Cob and LED's in general, need to driven and specific amperages [current] for better efficiency and photon output. Generally the lower you go, the more efficient, the diode usually becomes, watt for watt. Some of that is in the datasheets, in reference to Lumens / per watt and such.....