I am interested in these cobs as well, hopefully someone has some experience with itthe more i look at them the more i'm liking the clu046 1818 35k. I could run them at 1.7a and get nearly 80w or run them at 1050 for roughly 50w each, just not sure how efficient they are and if running them soft makes them more efficient or if i'd be better off running them at nominal would be best. I'm not big on running cobs hard and really don't like the idea of going over 100w a chip. I'd rather have a great spread than a few ultra-powerful cobs
Supra tested them recently and they unfortunately didn't come in as efficient as any of the Cree cxb chips. I was hoping they were more efficient and was gonna try them out until I saw the numbers on them!Has anybody evaluated the lumileds LUXEON CoB 1216 ? 22mm les so may be competitive to cxb3070s
http://www.futureelectronics.com/en/Search.aspx?dsNav=Ntk:PlainTextSearch|LUXEON+CoB+1216|3|,Ny:True,Ro:0,Aro:10,Nea:True,N:4294853587-4294924578-4294852556-4294851616
I was looking at the vero18 also, and liked the fact that I can run up to 12 off of my current drivers. I like the idea of running more chips softly for maximizing efficiency and spread of light. In my opinion several different points of light ran soft vs one point ran hard will probably give you better results. Also they don't require huge and heavy, cumbersome heat sinks to get the job done which means a lighter finished product. I still can't decide on what heat sinks I want to use for my CXB3590s, I can save a bunch going with CPU sinks, but would then have 16 different fans to power! I guess it will at least look clean...I hope!I'm not expecting them to be more efficient, I just want something decent. I currently have Vero 18, although i haven't assembled the light yet. If they were comparable to the veros then I would be happy.
Honestly not much is gonna compete with the cxb3590s, and if there was a cob more efficient I'm sure it would cost even more. I just want more options for cobs that AREN't as expensive as the cxb series to give more flexibility in builds.
I have some being delivered before Chinese new year(note to anyone buying from China, orders not in stock and not placed on China before the end of this week may not be delivered before end Feb, just saying, China closes basically for all of Feb) looking for some testers for this, Supra, anyone??When will these be available for purchase?
This is exactly why I think running the 100W CXB3590 at 50W is a really nice sweet spot. High efficiency and loads of spread is a great combination, to the point that higher wattage chips don't strike me as a better option. Any initial deficiency in intensity can easily be made up in numbers, which naturally enough leads to even better light distribution, aka spread.the more i look at them the more i'm liking the clu046 1818 35k. I could run them at 1.7a and get nearly 80w or run them at 1050 for roughly 50w each, just not sure how efficient they are and if running them soft makes them more efficient or if i'd be better off running them at nominal would be best. I'm not big on running cobs hard and really don't like the idea of going over 100w a chip. I'd rather have a great spread than a few ultra-powerful cobs
I am open to testing thes, not able to be as as in depth as others can, I am testing other cobs right now from Luminus Devices..CXM-32 in 3000K and 3500KI have some being delivered before Chinese new year(note to anyone buying from China, orders not in stock and not placed on China before the end of this week may not be delivered before end Feb, just saying, China closes basically for all of Feb) looking for some testers for this, Supra, anyone??
Cheers
Mark
Interesting. I look forward to seeing what you do with them. Meanwhile, I don't believe my costs are much different than yours and I'm confident the light distribution from more COBs will be better, as well.@ttystikk - I am looking at both penetration and total build cost and how quickly I can put together. If I can take a 250w COB and run them @ 125w to get around 50% efficient, with 4 COBs I can build a 500 watt light. Much simpler than wiring up 20 COB@ 25w or 10 at 50w. I will build you a 700 watt light for $900, how does that sound. I have one if you want.
I have some being delivered before Chinese new year(note to anyone buying from China, orders not in stock and not placed on China before the end of this week may not be delivered before end Feb, just saying, China closes basically for all of Feb) looking for some testers for this, Supra, anyone??
Cheers
Mark
I'd be in that, for sure. Aussie ingenuity wins!I have some being delivered before Chinese new year(note to anyone buying from China, orders not in stock and not placed on China before the end of this week may not be delivered before end Feb, just saying, China closes basically for all of Feb) looking for some testers for this, Supra, anyone??
Cheers
Mark
Yes I am working in this. I think what you have here is a problem child. The shipping of COB's relative to their value is easy(Cheap), the reverse applies to drivers. A $50 driver weighs in around 1-2 Kilos so is expensive to ship relative to its base value, I suspect even Jerry finds this which is why he suggests you find a local supplier in your market to support you. Since I am not a MW Disti and cant buy direct I am looking at another supplier of similar products, who I can buy direct from. The range I am considering isBonjour
No news about MW hlg series?
Will you sell some or no? When?
CU
Yes I am working in this. I think what you have here is a problem child. The shipping of COB's relative to their value is easy(Cheap), the reverse applies to drivers. A $50 driver weighs in around 1-2 Kilos so is expensive to ship relative to its base value, I suspect even Jerry finds this which is why he suggests you find a local supplier in your market to support you. Since I am not a MW Disti and cant buy direct I am looking at another supplier of similar products, who I can buy direct from. The range I am considering is
120 Watt, 1050mA, 69-114Vdc output, resistive dim option Price USD48.99 ea
120 Watt, 1400mA, 52-86Vdc output, resistive dim option Price USD48.99 ea
150 Watt, 1050mA, 86-143Vdc output, resistive dim option Price USD51.99 ea
150 Watt, 1400mA, 64-107Vdc output, resistive dim option Price USD51.99 ea
200 Watt, 1400ma, 86-143Vdc output, resistive dim option Price USD59.99 ea
250 Watt, 1400ma, 90-179Vdc output, resistive dim option Price USD63.95 ea
Are these competitive, is this the range. These come in 3 in 1 dim options, just chose resistive as that what you guys seem to use, they also have an IR dim model as well
Let me know
Cheers
Mark