Corso312
Well-Known Member
What led light might that be?
Its a light my buddy built, its vero cobs not the cree that I'm going to use but its outstanding.
What led light might that be?
i have, if i had the cash id have one of each monster unit, blackdog, 4000 dollars worth of cxb's, the solar flare, an apache tech 660, more a51's.Have you looked at BML's spydr LED's??
Does a51 even still make lights? Their website has said sold out for months...i have, if i had the cash id have one of each monster unit, blackdog, 4000 dollars worth of cxb's, the solar flare, an apache tech 660, more a51's.
realistically i think they all work (nutrients differ slightly) but it just comes down to efficiency these days. apparently the new a51's might come out at 70% which is ground breaking imo for retail.
BULLSHIT, I'M CALLING BULLSHIT on a retail panel hitting 70% efficiency! GTFO!i have, if i had the cash id have one of each monster unit, blackdog, 4000 dollars worth of cxb's, the solar flare, an apache tech 660, more a51's.
realistically i think they all work (nutrients differ slightly) but it just comes down to efficiency these days. apparently the new a51's might come out at 70% which is ground breaking imo for retail.
I'm sure @Eraserhead has the skinny?Does a51 even still make lights? Their website has said sold out for months...
One of the new lights on the way is 64-65% efficient. Not 70%. 4x 3590 3500k CD @ 700mA is quite efficient. I did build a light, just for fun mostly, considering it for retail. It has 8x 3590 @ 350mA. That would be close to 70%, but the probability of actually going through with making a production model is slim.I'm sure @Eraserhead has the skinny?
BULLSHIT, I'M CALLING BULLSHIT on a retail panel hitting 70% efficiency! GTFO!
Understood, and I want to be clear that while I'm fully aware that a 70% efficient light is possible- was it @SupraSPL who built one?- I'm also aware that the market is not going to show any demand for a thousand dollar (retail) 200W fixture. Definitely something for the future as chip prices continue their downward spiral.Just sold out of everything at the moment. There's new stuff on the way, couple weeks away.
One of the new lights on the way is 64-65% efficient. Not 70%. 4x 3590 3500k CD @ 700mA is quite efficient. I did build a light, just for fun mostly, considering it for retail. It has 8x 3590 @ 350mA. That would be close to 70%, but the probability of actually going through with making a production model is slim.
Understood, and I want to be clear that while I'm fully aware that a 70% efficient light is possible- was it @SupraSPL who built one?- I'm also aware that the market is not going to show any demand for a thousand dollar (retail) 200W fixture. Definitely something for the future as chip prices continue their downward spiral.
And, congrats on being sold out. Beats the shit out of tons of inventory you can't unload.
Right. Until that price comes down by at least two thirds I wouldn't expect it to be a money maker.The 8x 3590 lamp would be quite expensive, $10-/+ per watt retail. Some people would buy it, but I wouldn't expect it to sell in big numbers at all.
@SupraSPL have you ever done the math for the 3590 3500k CD @ 350mA?
Understood, and I want to be clear that while I'm fully aware that a 70% efficient light is possible- was it @SupraSPL who built one?- I'm also aware that the market is not going to show any demand for a thousand dollar (retail) 200W fixture. Definitely something for the future as chip prices continue their downward spiral.
And, congrats on being sold out. Beats the shit out of tons of inventory you can't unload.
There's potentially a big hole in that math, because unless your op is so small you don't need AC, you'll notice a big difference in climate control costs.i did the math. for a 900 par W/1500 total W garden, 1% of efficiency is worth $10/year in electricity
cost of cobs alone to build a 60% efficient 900 par W setup = $2000
cost of cobs alone to build a 65% efficient 900 par W setup = $3200
cost of cobs alone to build a 75% efficient 900 par W setup = <$9000
so 700 years to pay that efficiency back to go from 60->70, but only 120 years to payback the 60->65% eff.
low 60s is the sweetspot
I agree and clearly you and I were thinking the same thing, see my post above.Main benefit with LED for commercial growers is that you can replace 5000 watt of HPS with 5000 watt of LED and get an increase in yield which will boost profit much more than a lower electricity bill will ever do.
*depends on kwh cost, here in germany we're slowly reaching the 0.30€ mark soon, at what cost did you calculate that?i did the math. for a 900 par W/1500 total W garden, 1% of efficiency is worth $10/year in electricity
cost of cobs alone to build a 60% efficient 900 par W setup = $2000
cost of cobs alone to build a 65% efficient 900 par W setup = $3200
cost of cobs alone to build a 75% efficient 900 par W setup = <$9000
so 700 years to pay that efficiency back to go from 60->70, but only 120 years to payback the 60->65% eff.
low 60s is the sweetspot
Once all the energy is turned into 'waste heat', what do you do worth it? I use mine to keep my home nice and warm all winter, in Colorado. This helps to offset costs.*depends on kwh cost, here in germany we're slowly reaching the 0.30€ mark soon, at what cost did you calculate that?
15 cents/kwh here*depends on kwh cost, here in germany we're slowly reaching the 0.30€ mark soon, at what cost did you calculate that?
likewise, which makes heat a non-issue to an extent, at least 8 mos a year.Once all the energy is turned into 'waste heat', what do you do worth it? I use mine to keep my home nice and warm all winter, in Colorado. This helps to offset costs.
The 8x 3590 lamp would be quite expensive, $10-/+ per watt retail. Some people would buy it, but I wouldn't expect it to sell in big numbers at all.
[/QUOTE]I would buy a 70% efficient unit. Should do a one run of the fixture but make it dimmable 100-200w
ease up lolBULLSHIT, I'M CALLING BULLSHIT on a retail panel hitting 70% efficiency! GTFO!