Chip Green
Well-Known Member
Had I not stumbled into a bunch of floro fixtures for dirt cheap I'm using as hoods for my strips, Id be going right for these baking sheets, without a doubt.....
36 strips 216$As funny as it sounds, these are probably the most cost efficient builds available today.
The Cookie Cutter Build. Come bake with us. Let's make some dough together!36 strips 216$
2 hlg-120h-c700 $120
2 baking sheets 34$
$370 = 43380lm @ 156lm/w
CDN prices
For a 2x4
Pictures?Had I not stumbled into a bunch of floro fixtures for dirt cheap I'm using as hoods for my strips, Id be going right for these baking sheets, without a doubt.....
They are connected so you can use any side you want. If you put the first positive wire on top you could wire negative to positive on the top or bottom it doesn't matter.So, after copious hours spent researching options, then getting a surprise tax refund, I decided to invest in a DIY LED strip grow light. Ordered 8 eb series 44” strips from Digikey, 2 HLC-185C-H1050A drivers from Arrow, a roll of double-sided heat resistant tape from Amazon, 8 4-ft lengths of angle Aluminum from onlinemetals, and the last pieces arrived today.
Problem is I was caught by surprise by the 2 sets of +/- terminials on the light strips, and am suffering a brain fart as to how to wire them in series. I guess my confusion stems from not knowing how the terminals are connected or not, and I'm not excited about the prospect of sending $300 up in smoke. Here's a diagram with a driver and 3 strips. Can one of you generous souls shed some light on this for the noob by filling in on the partial diagram how the various +/- terminals are connected for a series circuit?
View attachment 3929002
Can you link any double row strips that are comparable? I would go look but it's so much easier if someone knows where they are.So I kinda fell into using strips inadvertently a few months ago. I have a $50 slyvina shop light i got from home depot a few years back. Ended up throwing it in a 2.5 x 2.5 tent. This light has 2 pcb strips, each strip has two runs of offset diodes. I think there are 154 diodes in total. Anyway the point here is why are you guys running single led strips when there are doubles out there? Cost? Or availability? great thread and I'm stoked to have read it. Was just curious.
Not as good when you look at the details. At 350ma its 143lm/w and its max current is 700ma. The quality of the diodes is far more important than if its a single strip or a double strip. What makes a strip good or mediocre is what diodes are on the strip and the eb strips and the samsung strips are the best there is right now. Samsungs slightly better but quite a bit more expensive. Plus these are major manufacturers with stellar reputations, ask anyone who has ever bought a blurple if that matters...https://www.digikey.com/products/en?mpart=JDHT-LMP06-E5435-90&v=1503
This is the first one I've found. As for comparable. that's up to who ever is building it.
The first thing I notice is that it's not as efficient, it's about 4 times the price of an equal EB strip and the diodes are too close together imo. The whole point of spreading them out properly is to get the best coverage you can. If you're going to start grouping them closely you might as well just run citi 1212's or other cheap cobs.https://www.digikey.com/products/en?mpart=JDHT-LMP06-E5435-90&v=1503
This is the first one I've found. As for comparable. that's up to who ever is building it.
Thanks! just what I was asking.Not as good when you look at the details. At 350ma its 143lm/w and its max current is 700ma. The quality of the diodes is far more important than if its a single strip or a double strip. What makes a strip good or mediocre is what diodes are on the strip and the eb strips and the samsung strips are the best there is right now. Samsungs slightly better but quite a bit more expensive. Plus these are major manufacturers with stellar reputations, ask anyone who has ever bought a blurple if that matters...
Thanks! just what I was asking.
If you want to go from seed to weed with one light...then use 4 strips a foot for 8 strips. That would put you in mid 700s for ppfd in a 2x2 (plenty in my opinion). I'm assuming you're running 700ma. And you can run them close to the canopy.Do you guys have any suggestions for a 2x2 build? I am thinking the EB strips from digikey.ca. Would 5 of them be enough? 3500k?
Thanks
Not too burst your bubble either, but then, we need to find the QER which is what the diode will emit as 100% efficiency/watt and compare that to the figure you are receiving from your amperage at running....Then, you need the umol/ joule to multiply against the ration of the Efficiency/ QER to get the PPF.....then we can start comparing output....You cannot compare Lumens / watts, especially across different Kelvin temps....People get lazy, use it as an easy guideline and people who don't know how it works, now assume a different meaning....No worries, it took me a long time before i started to understand it myself and i still only get the basics. When comparing in the future you need to look at the current the test is, and the lm/watt. That will give you a general idea of how good the led is. The softer a LED is run, the more effecient it should be. The eb strips are around 160lm/watt at 700ma and a max current of 1400ma. The one you linked is only 149lm/watt at half the current, and its max current is 700ma so not even close.
Thats not even considering spectrums and stuff which is way more balls deep than i even understand, haha.