l0wbob2016
Well-Known Member
i couldnt do a testrun up to now. a friend of me is finishing his grow at the moment and once the room is empty we will fix that light in the room and use it for the next run.Can this pull 2 lb a light?
i couldnt do a testrun up to now. a friend of me is finishing his grow at the moment and once the room is empty we will fix that light in the room and use it for the next run.Can this pull 2 lb a light?
i think i would want copper to take the heat away from really hot water....not use cooler water to wick heat away from copper which it probably does better with al......thats why copper works better with watercooling than aluminium right?
i think i would want copper to take the heat away from really hot water....not use cooler water to wick heat away from copper which it probably does better with al......
Yeah, youre right on this one. Conductivity is both ways. Aluminum is cheaper and lighter though. And copper doesnt perform better enough to make it worth it.but then this doesnt make sense for me in termes of thermal conductivity. because copper has a higher value than aluminium.
so please explain and if possible give me some science behind so i can understand. thanks
i totally agree that copper isnt worth the weight and cost for that better cooling performance.Yeah, youre right on this one. Conductivity is both ways. Aluminum is cheaper and lighter though. And copper doesnt perform better enough to make it worth it.
Lol. more like a Ferarri vs porshe...it is more like a choice to drive a ferrari instead of a smart.
Lol. more like a Ferarri vs porshe...
The thing is were using "identical" comparative heatsinks. If copper heatsink conducts heat twice as well as an aluminum one, you can double the surface area of the aluminum heatsink and get similiar results, no? Copper is greater than twice the price of aluminum.... So unless you have size constraints it makes little sense to use all copper. This is why a lot of heatsinks use copper base/ heatpipes to aluminum fins... pretty much the ideal design.
copper absorbs more heat but cannot dissipate it at a fast rate....aluminum may have medium conductivity compared to copper yes but the absorption dissaption ratio is more evenly matched even though conductivity is lower.....the copper will take a while to get hot but might take even longer shedding the heat passively.....and then ruining "sinking". there are positives and negatives both.Yeah, youre right on this one. Conductivity is both ways. Aluminum is cheaper and lighter though. And copper doesnt perform better enough to make it worth it.
Also aluminum can hold over twice the heat copper can...
based on what do u have this information? any source for this? i'm just curious...copper absorbs more heat but cannot dissipate it at a fast rate....aluminum may have medium conductivity compared to copper yes but the absorption dissaption ratio is more evenly matched even though conductivity is lower.....the copper will take a while to get hot but might take even longer shedding the heat passively.....and then ruining "sinking". there are positives and negatives both.
From what I have read, copper actually outperforms aluminum in basically all aspects. Copper conducts/transfers heat almost twice as fast as aluminum and dissipates it faster also. The reason so many people say aluminum dissipates better because of it's lower density is simply because if the heatsink weighs the same (copper vs alu) then the aluminum heatsink will be larger because its density is lower. More surface area, better convection.copper absorbs more heat but cannot dissipate it at a fast rate....aluminum may have medium conductivity compared to copper yes but the absorption dissaption ratio is more evenly matched even though conductivity is lower.....the copper will take a while to get hot but might take even longer shedding the heat passively.....and then ruining "sinking". there are positives and negatives both.
I could pick at your build but I won't. It's well made and looks like it's going to grow the hell out of some weed.well i have to say that at first i thought the same you are guessing here, that adding the mono wavelengths doesnt change the final spectrum that much but after some testing u see a more than expectable spectrum change. It is not like the spectrum changes to mainly that mono u added but it gets a little more power in that wavelength. With the bare eye u can see that pretty good. for example adding any mono from 590nm to 660nm changes the light color to about 2700K to 3000K when using 3500K COB's. Or better said, for me it looks like 2700K to 3000K.
The other thing with the watercooling "overkill" is that the cooler a LED or COB gets the longer the lifetime and the better the efficiency. Sure i use a lot of power for cooling but building this as one fixture, without any tanks or radiators that have to stand anywhere left me no choice but installing it all on the lamp. Also i am cooling the COB's with watercooling and cooling the LED's passive heatsinks with the airflow of the fans mounted on the radiators. So the Fans cool actually both, the COB's and the LED's.
Please keep also in mind that this is my first build of a grow lamp ever. I didnt know if my setup would even work, cause i never tested this watercooling on a COB before. As soon as i saw that the COB's stay rly "cold" but the LED's get pretty warm i decided to use that airflow to cool them too. Also another thing is that here where i live it's pretty cold and between september and april its pretty hard to get right temps in your room. Since the fans on the radiators are moving air right after turning the lamp on, the temp rises slowly ( talking about warming it up via the radiators, not the produced light ) and gets sucked out of the outtake filter.
Do you actively manage the temperature of your fixture with the water? Do you control the water temperature? If so, how?based on what do u have this information? any source for this? i'm just curious...
I've used cold water and hot water thus far. Counterintuitively, changing the temperature made little difference in light output but did cause noticeable changes in the growth characteristics of the plants themselves.
Yep, you read that exactly right.All of my racing radiators are aluminum.
do whatever you want, i am open for anything thats based on logic so that i can understandI could pick at your build but I won't.
well my AiO-solution came alrdy filled with water ( and some chemicals inside so no bacteria will grow ). taking the temperature i did at the very first days for checking what i get maximum temperature after a couple of hours on max power. i took the temp on 2 places from the outside ( so the temp of the metal on that radiator, not the actual water temp) , one the intake from the pump into the radiator and the other was the outake if the radiator that side that gets the cooled water back to the COB.Do you actively manage the temperature of your fixture with the water? Do you control the water temperature? If so, how?
I ask these questions because my own inquiry into water cooling depended on active temperature management and control of the water flowing through the fixtures.
if u are using a COB with always the same powersource and completely same way of transfering heat then ofc changing the temp of the water that cools the COB will have an influence on the actuall temp of the COB ( dont use water that cold that after cooling down the COB the water that runs into the radiator is cooler than the room it stands in, this would be trouble )I've used cold water and hot water thus far. Counterintuitively, changing the temperature made little difference in light output but did cause noticeable changes in the growth characteristics of the plants themselves.
haha made my day would be funny if these guys werent able to build up a thing like this by themselfesOP, have you been noticing men in black suites lately?.
Interesting things happen when you actually try something. Often, you get results you didn't expect.do whatever you want, i am open for anything thats based on logic so that i can understand
well my AiO-solution came alrdy filled with water ( and some chemicals inside so no bacteria will grow ). taking the temperature i did at the very first days for checking what i get maximum temperature after a couple of hours on max power. i took the temp on 2 places from the outside ( so the temp of the metal on that radiator, not the actual water temp) , one the intake from the pump into the radiator and the other was the outake if the radiator that side that gets the cooled water back to the COB.
the intake had max readings of 41°C and the outtake had a max reading of 39°C after 4 hours at 100% power in a non ventilated room.
if needed i can turn up the power of the watercoolers but for now i dimmed them down as much as the driver let me ( to about 25W for 5 waterpumps plus 5 fans ) and got these results.
i forgot to take temp messurements when the watercoolers work also at 100% power. also i stopped taking the watertemp after i realised there will never be a problem.
if u are using a COB with always the same powersource and completely same way of transfering heat then ofc changing the temp of the water that cools the COB will have an influence on the actuall temp of the COB ( dont use water that cold that after cooling down the COB the water that runs into the radiator is cooler than the room it stands in, this would be trouble )
so what changes in the growth characteristics of the plants did u see? give some examples cause i cant imagine a characteristic changing that hard. thats very interesting.