MidwestGorilla219
Well-Known Member
I have read somewhere that the spider farmer lights on Alibaba have less diodes then the ones you can buy on Amazon. I have a sf-2000 and use it to light a 2x3 in my 2x4 tent with good results.
Hey man Spider Farmer uses different boards for the SF-1000 (218 diodes) than they do for the SF-2000 and SF-4000 (the boards for these lights have 303 diodes each).I have a spider farmer branded sf-4000 on the way and a unit from a manufacturer on Alibaba that appears to be the source for the spider farmer branded units. Each light contains the same chips and drivers. 500 units or more and you can put your own company logo on the unit. A spider farmer logo for instance. I will compare the two units. I will post pictures also for everyone to see for themselves.
Excellent point on the number of diodes. That would certainly be a way to cheapen the product while appearing the same in a stock photo. I will count the diodes of each individual panel. I will report back whether there is or is not a variance. We'll put a nail in this coffin once and for all.
Yea I know the light is not from you but it uses the same diodes and driver that is on your lights.HI dear, sorry to tell you that there is no business is authorized to sell our products on Alibaba. Please pay attention.
The SF-4000 is 450 watts/1212 diodes=.37 watts per diode.I asked the representative how many diodes were included on the 6 panel 660w unit. 1308 pieces is the response I received. That is 218 pieces per panel. The SF-4000 has 1212 pieces spread over 4 panels. That is 303 pieces per panel. The Alibaba unit has 85 fewer diodes per panel than the SF-1000. However, there are still 96 more diodes on the Alibaba unit with 6 panels for $125 less than the spider farmer unit on Amazon.
Edit:
The Alibaba individual panels are smaller than the spider farmer individual panels. The Alibaba unit is larger by overall length with 6 panels instead of 4 on the spider farmer sf-4000. The measurements given are 27.5" x 23.62" x 2.2" with 6 panels. The 4 panel spider farmer sf-4000 measures 25.3" x 21.1" x 2.3". The amount of power consumption per diode is 1.98w on the Alibaba unit. The amount of power consumption per diode on the spider farmer unit is 2.69w per diode. I'm looking forward to comparing the two units side by side.
Thank you correcting my calculation error. Math and me at 6 am don't get along too well. It appears the Alibaba unit's driver provides more power to more diodes. This leads me to another question. Why do different fixtures push different amounts of power to the exact same diodes? Do the diodes emit more light? Is there not a maximum amount of wattage that can run through the chips? Does that indicate spider farmer is using under powered drivers, and more light output could be achieved if they used a more powerful driver? I might have to reach out to GreneGene on this one to get to the bottom of this. If anyone here is in the know by all means chime in.The SF-4000 is 450 watts/1212 diodes=.37 watts per diode.
The LEDs on the six board Alibaba light are driven harder. 660 watts/1308 diodes=.50 watts per diode.
I'm at work so I don't have time to go into much detail at the moment.Thank you correcting my calculation error. Math and me at 6 am don't get along too well. It appears the Alibaba unit's driver provides more power to more diodes. This leads me to another question. Why do different fixtures push different amounts of power to the exact same diodes? Do the diodes emit more light? Is there not a maximum amount of wattage that can run through the chips? Does that indicate spider farmer is using under powered drivers, and more light output could be achieved if they used a more powerful driver? I might have to reach out to GreneGene on this one to get to the bottom of this. If anyone here is in the know by all means chime in.
Looking at the numbers on the specs alone without a live side by side test it would appear that the Alibaba unit is equipped with more diodes, supplies more power to each diode, has a slightly larger light spread, and is $125 cheaper than the best spider farmer unit available.
Not advisable, could be a safety risk and you will greatly shorten the length of the LEDs life. You would be powering the diodes well over their rated maximum wattage (which is about .6 watts per LM301B diode).Idk shit about these leds honestly. I just want to know if I can upgrade my sf1000 driver to say a 240w driver?
Thanks for the technical insight Baristan. I'm wrangling a rambunctious 5 year old today. When I get a little breathing room I'll pull up the data sheets to get a better understanding of the voltage and flux binning. These LED chips are the greatest thing since sliced bread. I want to learn all I can absorb.I'm at work so I don't have time to go into much detail at the moment.
Samsung LM301B is an example of a mid-power diode. They are 3 volt .2 watt diodes that can be driven up to 200mA (absolute max) and about .6 watts each. You may want to look into voltage and flux binning of these diodes as well. Lower voltage and higher flux bins are the best of these diodes and the most highly sought after (you can read about the different bins in the LM301B datasheet).
Ok I seeNot advisable, could be a safety risk and you will greatly shorten the length of the LEDs life. You would be powering the diodes well over their rated maximum wattage (which is about .6 watts per LM301B diode).
218 diodes/240 watt driver=over .9 watts per diode. Not sure about the mono-color diodes on the board. Spider Farmer hasn't stated what type of diode they use for the 660nn and 760nm on their boards.
Not to mention great CS, no need to pull BS returns when you own a HLG product, not to mention if the tech improves or as boards begin to fade you can rebuild them with the latest tech. Can you do the same with SF stuff or anything else you can get from say Mars ( oh same company FYI as SF). Don't get me wrong I'm a bit of a light Horder but only till I find what works best for me. Once I've learned I'll tstick with what design works best and then put my eggs into a reputable companies basket like that of HLG, timber or ect.I have both SF and HLG products. They are both good LEDs. If i had to pick one tho, id go with the HLG. No real science behind it, it just looks twice as bright to me.
How about OSRAM diodes and ERP drivers?...
That's why it's important to look at specifications. What components are actually on board the unit? How many watts does the unit draw? What kind of LED chips are onboard? What kind of driver? What kind of heat sink? Samsung chips are the standard. Accept nothing less. Mean well drivers are the standard. Accept nothing less. I have 2 cheap LED units branded as "HI GROW" I received from a friend as payment for 18 hash plant clones. I would never (and I mean never) purchase crap like this. They give off a lot of heat for the light output they produce, and I only use them for vegging in one of my two nursery tents. I intend to remove them from service as soon as I can. They were essentially free to me. The only price that makes them worth using at all.
By the way, I have no idea what LARF means. I don't understand most of the new aged acronyms the young thundercats use nowadays.
If it makes you feel better to pay HLG twice what you should be paying for the exact same components, by all means give them your money. People like yourself are putting the owner's kids through college and paying for all his luxuries in life. Give yourself a pat on the back.Not to mention great CS, no need to pull BS returns when you own a HLG product, not to mention if the tech improves or as boards begin to fade you can rebuild them with the latest tech. Can you do the same with SF stuff or anything else you can get from say Mars ( oh same company FYI as SF). Don't get me wrong I'm a bit of a light Horder but only till I find what works best for me. Once I've learned I'll tstick with what design works best and then put my eggs into a reputable companies basket like that of HLG, timber or ect.
I am unfamiliar with OSRAM diodes and ERP drivers. I just recently began my journey into LED technology. I'll read up and report back later.How about OSRAM diodes and ERP drivers?
For a guy new to the led world you are strongly opinionated. As far as what a guy does with his money and who he chooses to support is up to him and him only. If you sleep better at night knowing that you purchased something for a good deal by all means do so. As far as what I've bought I've have purchased both new as well as new to me lights and other equipment to get started. The used bits and pieces I've bought are by far superior to the crap tech people like you are trying to convince others here to buy from Alibaba or whatever offshore scam website you suggested to buy from, if they do I hope your shit arrives and your CC number doesn't end up getting swiped afterwards, oh and enjoy the CS that comes with it. Makes me wonder if you are actually working for some shit box company trying to spread meaningless information about actual reputable companies in hopes of getting the crumbs that their hard work and long hours might leave behind. Last thing I'm happy to provide for a education as well as jobs for people who live in the USA. Their company inturn supports someone else's family overseas where the chips and other parts likely are made but who cares. You bought a new car lately? Might say made in the USA but most of the parts are made overseas, and yes if I could afford one I'd happily drive a Mercedes but until then I'll stick with our reliable Honda purchased from our local dealer.I am unfamiliar with OSRAM diodes and ERP drivers. I just recently began my journey into LED technology. I'll read up and report back later.
You sound like a very angry individual. However I didn't read an intelligible counter argument regarding my point on the Samsung LM301b chips or the mean-well drivers in that ridiculous diatribe of yours. Have you ever read Mark Twain? I grew up in Missouri, so we had to do a lot of reading on that fella in my school days. One of his most famous quotes rings true here. "It's easier to fool people than to convince them that they have been fooled."For a guy new to the led world you are strongly opinionated. As far as what a guy does with his money and who he chooses to support is up to him and him only. If you sleep better at night knowing that you purchased something for a good deal by all means do so. As far as what I've bought I've have purchased both new as well as new to me lights and other equipment to get started. The used bits and pieces I've bought are by far superior to the crap tech people like you are trying to convince others here to buy from Alibaba or whatever offshore scam website you suggested to buy from, if they do I hope your shit arrives and your CC number doesn't end up getting swiped afterwards, oh and enjoy the CS that comes with it. Makes me wonder if you are actually working for some shit box company trying to spread meaningless information about actual reputable companies in hopes of getting the crumbs that their hard work and long hours might leave behind. Last thing I'm happy to provide for a education as well as jobs for people who live in the USA. Their company inturn supports someone else's family overseas where the chips and other parts likely are made but who cares. You bought a new car lately? Might say made in the USA but most of the parts are made overseas, and yes if I could afford one I'd happily drive a Mercedes but until then I'll stick with our reliable Honda purchased from our local dealer.
$130 for shipping. $504 CONTRACT INVOICE total backed with trade assurance.Hey man Spider Farmer uses different boards for the SF-1000 (218 diodes) than they do for the SF-2000 and SF-4000 (the boards for these lights have 303 diodes each).
The six board light that you linked in your second post of this thread uses the 218 diode boards. That's one of the reasons the light is less expensive. Did you get a decent deal on shipping?