turnip brain
Active Member
I have spent the last week reading literally thousands of posts here and on another forum about DIY Led building and design. I feel pretty good about the background info, have a pretty good basic understanding plant spectrum needs, and understand basic driver loading/ LED/driver matching. I also have the hands on shop and basic circuit building skills to be successful.
I don't assume to have the expertise to fully optimize all relevant design criteria, so I'd like to get some input.
Reasons for wanting to change from HPS to LED:
-Heat management, the 400W HPS is in a SS2 hood with high CFM cooling. Nonetheless, IR is heating up that small space way too much. With another fresh air fan circuit when doors are closed, temp in the space exceeds 95F. Bigger fans are not a solution. More fresh air flow at our super low ambient humidity will stress plants.
-less energy consumption,
-more even light distribution in the grow space, and resulting more even canopy. The HPS in a SS2 hood has very uneven distribution.
Bottom line, the space is too small to really accommodate this arrangement.
Here are my known criteria so far:
The horizontal grow area is 24" x 42" or 7 sq ft.
Height is 55" including space for the light itself. I am currently using mainlining/lst techniques to keep canopy low and even.
This build is for a dedicated light for flowering only. My vegging setup is fine for now, but the flowering setup is in need of help. There is no need for switching strings on or off to change spectrum, dimmers etc. KISS!
So, basic design concerns:
Even light distribution and relative heat sinking: building on a single large heatsink is an attractive idea in terms of construction, but perhaps building several light bars to spread out would provide better spread. Trade offs: cost for different heat sink arrangements and relative work to construct. I don't see any trouble having several light bars connected together by cross bracing into one effective panel. Any thoughts here in terms of light bars vs a massive panel?
Wattage: the guidelines i have come away with so far are for 30w/sq ft minimum, up to around 65w/sq ft. I assume this is operational wattage not combined rated wattage of LED drivers. This would mean 210-455 watts. For affordability I think i want to shoot for around 250W (I know wattage per se is not the most effective representation of useful plant light, but need a ball park starting figure) Am I in the ball park?
Emitter selection: Seems to me using Cree chips, predominately WW, perhaps with some NW mixed in would be a good basic blend/starting point for a flowering light. I'd like to nail down ratios, explore best bang for the buck in terms of chip wattage vs work of mounting/soldering more lower wattage chips. Rrog's recent build with Cree xm-l chips seems a potentially good balance in terms of using higher wattage chips so less pieces for combined output. I plan to purchase chips already mounted on stars.
Driver selection: I get the driver loading requirements/calcs. Straightforward. Just a matter of finding the best deal on the appropriate drivers when the time comes.
All input appreciated!!!
I don't assume to have the expertise to fully optimize all relevant design criteria, so I'd like to get some input.
Reasons for wanting to change from HPS to LED:
-Heat management, the 400W HPS is in a SS2 hood with high CFM cooling. Nonetheless, IR is heating up that small space way too much. With another fresh air fan circuit when doors are closed, temp in the space exceeds 95F. Bigger fans are not a solution. More fresh air flow at our super low ambient humidity will stress plants.
-less energy consumption,
-more even light distribution in the grow space, and resulting more even canopy. The HPS in a SS2 hood has very uneven distribution.
Bottom line, the space is too small to really accommodate this arrangement.
Here are my known criteria so far:
The horizontal grow area is 24" x 42" or 7 sq ft.
Height is 55" including space for the light itself. I am currently using mainlining/lst techniques to keep canopy low and even.
This build is for a dedicated light for flowering only. My vegging setup is fine for now, but the flowering setup is in need of help. There is no need for switching strings on or off to change spectrum, dimmers etc. KISS!
So, basic design concerns:
Even light distribution and relative heat sinking: building on a single large heatsink is an attractive idea in terms of construction, but perhaps building several light bars to spread out would provide better spread. Trade offs: cost for different heat sink arrangements and relative work to construct. I don't see any trouble having several light bars connected together by cross bracing into one effective panel. Any thoughts here in terms of light bars vs a massive panel?
Wattage: the guidelines i have come away with so far are for 30w/sq ft minimum, up to around 65w/sq ft. I assume this is operational wattage not combined rated wattage of LED drivers. This would mean 210-455 watts. For affordability I think i want to shoot for around 250W (I know wattage per se is not the most effective representation of useful plant light, but need a ball park starting figure) Am I in the ball park?
Emitter selection: Seems to me using Cree chips, predominately WW, perhaps with some NW mixed in would be a good basic blend/starting point for a flowering light. I'd like to nail down ratios, explore best bang for the buck in terms of chip wattage vs work of mounting/soldering more lower wattage chips. Rrog's recent build with Cree xm-l chips seems a potentially good balance in terms of using higher wattage chips so less pieces for combined output. I plan to purchase chips already mounted on stars.
Driver selection: I get the driver loading requirements/calcs. Straightforward. Just a matter of finding the best deal on the appropriate drivers when the time comes.
All input appreciated!!!