I have a pair of 97cri, 2700k vero 18's.... I wonder what I would get if mixed with three of the 5000k 70cri chips.Ohhhhhhhhhh. Cool. That does sound tough to find. I wonder if mixing 5000k and 3500k would work? Or 3000k.
And why CXB in this given situation?If you're willing to spend almost $10 for lens, I'd stay away from the linked one and buy FN14074_STELLA-HB from Ledil instead. It's backed up by a respectable mfg with all the spec sheets available.
CXB options sounds best to me.
Efficiency and simplicity. That's the two words I like.And why CXB in this given situation?
Given an unlimited budget I'd run 8@ 100maGiven leds were free and time was unlimited, It would be better to use 4 cxb3570 at 350mA. Then you'd get the best efficiency and the best cooling/lighting spread.
I understand your logic but I don't agree with it. Also, having two separated heat sinks powered by a single driver (unless I misunderstood the original post Bicit made) would ultimately become a nuisance in a grow room. A single heat sink with the necessary COBs would be much easier to deal with (all in one).Efficiency and simplicity. That's the two words I like.
I don't believe that 4 sources would make that much difference to justify lower efficiency.
This is what I was thinking. Have a little 75w "cube" put the heatsink and fan in a section of wire gutter cut to length. Connec the two cubes to each otherr via some aluminum c channel to keeps things level and hide the wiring.Efficiency and simplicity. That's the two words I like.
I don't believe that 4 sources would make that much difference to justify lower efficiency.
Or you can bug into the driver and power the fans with small DC-DC voltage regulator. It's probably more efficient than any other small AC-DC PSU, cheap and you can get away with less wiring.This is what I was thinking. Have a little 75w "cube" put the heatsink and fan in a section of wire gutter cut to length. Connec the two cubes to each otherr via some aluminum c channel to keeps things level and hide the wiring.
I think with two CXB3590's on a HLG-120H I'd only have about 6-8v at the end of the string. Do you have a link to such a regulator? That would be nicer than running 5 wires(two for AC) to the lamp instead of 3.Or you can bug into the driver and power the fans with small DC-DC voltage regulator. It's probably more efficient than any other small AC-DC PSU, cheap and you can get away with less wiring.
edit: I forgot I was talking about 3590's which means >75V voltage input for DCDC regulator. Not sure whether it'd that cheap.
I'm not really sure if I know what you mean.I think with two
See the edit, I hit the post button with my palmI'm not really sure if I know what you mean.
You'd need to connect the regulator in parallel with the COB. It wouldn't change the voltage needed for the whole string but the COBs would be getting less power (power of the fan + losses on the regulator).I think with two CXB3590's on a HLG-120H I'd only have about 6-8v at the end of the string. Do you have a link to such a regulator? That would be nicer than running 5 wires(two for AC) to the lamp instead of 3.
I was asking myself the same. Unfortunately I wasn't able to find any suitable AC fan. Everything I found was too big/powerful/noisy or unsuitable design. I did not search that well TBH.On a side note, why do we even use DC fans? I've just been using them because I'm used to PC fans, but wouldn't we be able to just use transformers with no regulation if we used AC fans? Honest question. I don't know much about AC vs DC fans. I can't understand why we need regulation at all for fans.
Even with DC fans we wouldn't need regulation, but with AC, we'd literally just need a transformer.