DIY Chilled Logic Puck (individual)

Trew

Member
So I was looking at building my own 100W Chilled pucks, but can't find anywhere to purchase the hanging attachment for singular builds. (may just end up contacting vendors)

You know, the one with the hanging hook that attaches to the heatsink to hang individually? Pic of the whole unit attached for reference.

The idea is to build with 140mm pin heatsinks if possible so I can put them on rails later. For now, I'd like to sprinkle them into existing lighting.
 

Attachments

Trew

Member
Build cost notes:

Pre-built = $185 (dimmable w/ cased controller)

DIY = approx. $158
$55 Chilled Logic Puck V3
~$50 Meanwell HBG-100-48B driver
$25 160mm pin heatsink (building my own racks anyways later - will adjust)
$4 ChilLED Logic Puck Thermal Pad
$5 Universal Wire Connector
~$10 10' power cord
$6 cased potentiometer w/ knob
~$3 hardware (bots, nuts, etc)

Source most individual parts from rapidLED.com ... don't think the DIY price could come down much more from other sources as a) don't want to change the puck, b) a meanwell driver is industry standard and not a part to cheap out on, c) thermal pad/heatsink may not be available other places
 

TintEastwood

Well-Known Member
Maybe...
Most of the pin heatsinks have threaded screw holes on the sides, or one could drill more of their own.
Then just use thin cable / "piano wire" to hang each individually.

140-Pin.png


For 4 cobs (pucks), I would wire them to a single (remote) meanwell of appropriate size/type for the qty/power needed.
(I have a rapidled fixture - x5 vero29 cobs.)
 

Teag

Well-Known Member
I would expect running those at 100 watts would be difficult without any air. Setting up a fan to blow on them would probably be fine.

Check out chilled's clearance items. They have B-grade pucks that only have cosmetic damage. Its how I bought mine.

 

TreeFarmerCharlie

Well-Known Member
Don’t take this the wrong way, because DIY can be fun, but it seems like a lot of time is spent just ordering everything from multiple vendors, and assembling the lights, only to save a little over 10%. If the assembled lights come with a decent warranty then that warranty could be worth a lot more than the $27 you’d save building one of these lights.
 

Trew

Member
Don’t take this the wrong way, because DIY can be fun, but it seems like a lot of time is spent just ordering everything from multiple vendors, and assembling the lights, only to save a little over 10%. If the assembled lights come with a decent warranty then that warranty could be worth a lot more than the $27 you’d save building one of these lights.
4 total pucks added incrementally (adding to current LEDs). Eventually replacing everything in the 5x5 with these. If just one or two I was thinking along the lines of you as well, plus it supports a vendor more.
 

4ftRoots

Well-Known Member
I agree with above. Nowadays I seriously considered buying a light for my new tent. However, I wanted a exceedingly large diode count so I had to build my own. I would have bought qb R-spec if I wasn't a diode whore.
 

Trew

Member
I would expect running those at 100 watts would be difficult without any air. Setting up a fan to blow on them would probably be fine.

Check out chilled's clearance items. They have B-grade pucks that only have cosmetic damage. Its how I bought mine.

Expecting to need a fan on them for sure.

PRO TIP on their clearance section! Will definitely keep lurking.
 

Airwalker16

Well-Known Member
I would expect running those at 100 watts would be difficult without any air. Setting up a fan to blow on them would probably be fine.

Check out chilled's clearance items. They have B-grade pucks that only have cosmetic damage. Its how I bought mine.

WTF man, they're still charging 40 fucking dollars for that tightly clustered shit? Wow.
 

TreeFarmerCharlie

Well-Known Member
I agree with above. Nowadays I seriously considered buying a light for my new tent. However, I wanted a exceedingly large diode count so I had to build my own. I would have bought qb R-spec if I wasn't a diode whore.
I don’t have a problem with DIY, at all, and I recently ordered strips and drivers to build my own, too. I just thought a 10-15% savings didn’t seem worth it to me. I’m just used to seeing people save a lot more with DIY.
 

Teag

Well-Known Member
Apparently there's a disclaimer on their site for a 25% tariff included in their pricing until it the tariff is no longer active.
rapipled is the other place I would check. There are others of course, but I've bought from both of these websites.
 
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