George2324
Well-Known Member
Ok great thanks. 43mm spacing and 2 holes.
M4 screws right?
M4 screws right?
Mechanical Dimensions Figure 22: Drawing for Vero 29 LED Array Notes for Figure 22: 1. Drawings are not to scale. 2. Drawing dimensions are in millimeters. 3. Unless otherwise specified, tolerances are ± 0.10mm. 4. Mounting holes (4X) are for M3 screws. 5. Bridgelux recommends four tapped holes for mounting screws with 43.0 ± 0.10mm center-to-center spacing. 6. Screws with flat shoulders (pan, dome, button, round, truss, mushroom) provide optimal torque control. Do NOT use flat, countersink, or raised head screws. 7. Solder pads and connector port are labeled “+” and “-“ to denote positive and negative, respectively. 8. It is not necessary to provide electrical connections to both the solder pads and the connector port. Either set may be used depending on application specific design requirements. 9. Refer to Application Notes AN30 and AN31 for product handling, mounting and heat sink recommendations. 10. The optical center of the LED Array is nominally defined by the mechanical center of the array to a tolerance of ± 0.2mm. 11. Bridgelux maintains a flatness of 0.10mm across the mounting surface of the arraydoes anyone have a drawing of the required holes for heat circular diameter heat sinks and the holes required for a vero 29 c cob?
The figure comes from Julian at Birmingham aluminium, he just so happens to design/make heatsinks for a living.
theoretically black absorbs photons and is the worst color
No offence Cobby but it seems to me you are the one who is assuming and incorrectly at that.i respect his opinion, but unless hes tested different color heatsinks in a sphere thats still just an assumption. any emissivity differences that reduced chip temp and increased lumens would be accounted for in the sphere, as would photon absorption by the heatsink
cool id love to see any dataThe man knows his stuff and has tested different colours and coatings.
ultimately umol/J is what were after, so it sure is. youre completely ignoring absorbance of photons which whould tanslate into extra heat the heatsink would need to dissipate.Clearly no sphere testing is needed
Hmmm so how does black body radiation fit into the above, I guess colour temperatures, plancks law etc is all a load of nonsenseColor of anodization has no impact on radiation heat transfer
What I'd suggest you do is delete your comment since it's irrelevant and based on opinion. Take another look at the list Cobkits posted on page 1. You'll notice that basically all colors are identical and in the range of .82 - .88. If you tested all those colors 1000 times each they would all come out with the identical reading. This has been tested for decades now by people 10 times as smart as your buddy on equipment far more advanced than his.I suggest you read my original post to see "exactly" what I said with regards to differences
Will do as soon as you get back to me on how does black body radiation fit into the above, I guess colour temperatures, plancks law etc is all a load of nonsense right?What I'd suggest you do is delete your comment since it's irrelevant and based on opinion. Take another look at the list Cobkits posted on page 1. You'll notice that basically all colors are identical and in the range of .82 - .88. If you tested all those colors 1000 times each they would all come out with the identical reading. This has been tested for decades now by people 10 times as smart as your buddy on equipment far more advanced than his.
What I'd suggest you do is delete your comment since it's irrelevant and based on opinion. Take another look at the list Cobkits posted on page 1. You'll notice that basically all colors are identical and in the range of .82 - .88. If you tested all those colors 1000 times each they would all come out with the identical reading. This has been tested for decades now by people 10 times as smart as your buddy on equipment far more advanced than his.
What's the point in anodizing our heatsinks when the're not in contact with water (24/7). Since bare aluminium forms a natural oxide layer anyway, and the naturally formed oxide layer stops further corrosion.
I imagine silver/white anodized heatsinks would surely be better for greenhouse applications where they will absorb less sunlight/heat.
Would be interesting to get chromate conversion coated heatsinks since it would allow for low resistance grounding.
You aren't understanding what black body radation even is. Don't confuse an object that is visibly black with a black body. A white colored object and a black colored object can both be black bodies.Will do as soon as you get back to me on how does black body radiation fit into the above, I guess colour temperatures, plancks law etc is all a load of nonsense right?
Because the smart arse geniuses who came up with the above models, who are 15 times as smart as you buddy and use equipment far more advance than those guys you know which, by the way are the exact same models/laws the lighting industry use, well according to what you are saying buddy then Cree, Citi, Bridgelux must be using flawed data and are also incorrect right buddy???
And yeah I am taking the proverbial pee and being a sarcastic so and so... and what buddy
Btw way like I said to Cobby did you actually read my first comment, or does you head and tongue simply have a particular liking to being wedged up Cobby's ass (no offence Cobby) haha!