tomate
Well-Known Member
But not the S6 bin, the cheapest I saw were around $0.08.there like $0.055 an led after all
But not the S6 bin, the cheapest I saw were around $0.08.there like $0.055 an led after all
These look nice.2.0w/m.k,558pcs Samsung561C,
3000Kevin,S6,CRI:80, 250w@
48Vf dc @5200m/a ,
2 mm thick 490 grams
just hooked one up last night
like the coverage and intensity
View attachment 3947002 View attachment 3947003
have few more items on the way
will start a thread on the led strips i should have this week
1170*20*2mm, 2.0w/m.k,160pcs Samsung561C,
3000Kevin,S6,CRI:80, 70w@ 48Vf dc @1460m/a
cannot wait to build a 4ft x 4 ft10 strip 700 w grid that will run at 500w
Very healthy. Where did you get those panels bro?took one of the 320 watt over 4 x4 area 2 x 160 w driven panels..
amazingly dense multi branching and good growth way down
gotta start flowerig with em soonView attachment 3965688
strange leaf shape is BSHW all are sativas and a good 2 ft high bushes
Best stuff available IMHO is Liquid Pro and Liquid Ultra liquid metal compounds from Coolabratory...Nano diamond thermal paste has 3x the cooling capacity of any of the silver pastes.
Best stuff available IMHO is Liquid Pro and Liquid Ultra liquid metal compounds from Coolabratory...
the manufacturer seems to think that's a bad ideaPlease notice that the Liquid Ultra is not suitable with the usage of aluminum surfaces.
Ahh - I missed the aluminum warning.the manufacturer seems to think that's a bad idea
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermal_grease
compare diamond to silver on that page ^
Please do. That's very interesting.Ahh - I missed the aluminum warning.
Manufacturers claims for Arctic Silver 5 and Antec Nano Diamond are both similar in the 8.5W/m-K range. But I generally take such manufacturer claims with a grain of salt. The exception to that rule is 3M. Their stuff is marketed to industry rather than the consumer and their conductivity numbers are spot on. Their TCG-2035 is rated at 4.1 W/m-K. I read a paper recently that did a comparison test of several different compounds, (for thermal control in electric vehicles) and the 3M stuff bested the others by a good margin - one of them being Arctic Silver 5, which did not even come close to its 8.5W/m-K claim - it was less than 1W/m-K. I'll post a link to the document if I can find it again.