#ttystikk
Lots of questions.
What ever happened to all of the claims about the deep red and bright blue/violet specturms that 3w manufacturers made? Has that mostly gone out the window?
Do most people add a lense? If so what angle?
Is there any major advantage to the CXB3590 over the Vero29?
Is there a max wattage you can drive the COB at? What happens if I hook 1 CXB3590 to a 200w driver?
Good questions!
In order, then;
1. We growers tested these claims and found them false. It turns out that plants benefit from full spectrum PAR, the more of it the better to the upper limit of 1500PPfd. Those spectra are still important, but overall output remains critical in getting successful results.
2. Lenses are optional but popular, both to help direct the light and to protect the fragile light emitting surface of the COB. I see a lot of people talk about getting 80° or 90° lenses, like I got. COB LED lasts for years; softly driven, for decades- unless you screw up that LES.
3. THE advantage is efficiency. Since that's the name of the game, it's a substantial advantage. Remember that acquisition cost is only once and that maintenance and operating costs continually add up. This makes an ever stronger argument for the more efficient chip, as no matter how much more expensive it is up front, it will always be less expensive in the long run. And no bulb changes!
Every COB, like every other circuit known to Man, has an upper limit, or 'nominal' output. This is maximum wattage- and surprisingly, it's also the point of LEAST efficiency! Running more COBs at lower wattage boosts efficiency substantially, which is why you see a lot of DIY COB LED panels running underdriven chips.
Example, CXB3590 3500k CD bin;
Nominal is either 100-110W per chip and returns 44% efficiency.
50W means twice the chips and twice the cost, but you get 56% efficiency, 12 points or 27% higher.
23W means twice as many chips again as the 50W example, but efficiency climbs still more, to 63%(!)... for quadruple the cost in chips.
Softly driven chips are also shown to last dramatically longer, like pass them down to your kids longer.
COB chips die when they get too hot. Overdrive a chip and you'll fry it.