Hello Rollitup guys and gals!
WOW I have learned a lot here from reading a ton of the DIY threads and I want to start by saying how much I appreciate this forum. I even got some advice here a couple months ago on another thread before I commenced ordering parts.
It was a close contest between Vero's and Cree's. I am going to run both, but chose to start with Vero's. My first build uses a heatsink I recovered off an old (music) PA system, two of the Vero29 5K's, and some cheap and cheesy power supplies I "happened upon" on fleabay while I was scoping better ones like the HLG MW's.
I took a cell phone charger (states its 9v but measured higher, and at enough mA), removed it from its shell and mounted it to the re-purposed oddball terminal blocks I also recovered. This one ain't very pretty, but I wanted to do a "proof of concept", see it working. And of course it has raised at least one question. Here are pix of the build as it went together: The question is afterward.
raw heatsink: re-used some holes, drilled others, filed the burrs off etc.
...wet sanded with 1000 grit after scribing the locations and drilling the mount holes...
Drilled and tapped (before the final sanding...)
test mounting the vero's
The terminal block is thermoplastic...I bolted it to the side of an outside fin. Then zip tied the supply and the fan power and soldered 'em up.
...my understanding is, these should be wired in series, not parallel. Feel free to correct me if I am wrong. Wired in parallel, they both light up. Wired in series - they don't. When I wire just one COB - it (of course) lights up, and there I measure 1.75 amps of current. Being a constant current driver I will guess that the 3000 mA (3A) rating on the label is way high (duh, its chinese) but it seems like 1.75 should be enough to drive 2 in series. What am I missing (besides my mind), and what would happen if I run them in parallel (damage the COB's, the supply or both?) Not really sure...I'm fair at electronics but this tech is new to me.
Thanks for looking....hopefully other noobs can benefit from this too.
WOW I have learned a lot here from reading a ton of the DIY threads and I want to start by saying how much I appreciate this forum. I even got some advice here a couple months ago on another thread before I commenced ordering parts.
It was a close contest between Vero's and Cree's. I am going to run both, but chose to start with Vero's. My first build uses a heatsink I recovered off an old (music) PA system, two of the Vero29 5K's, and some cheap and cheesy power supplies I "happened upon" on fleabay while I was scoping better ones like the HLG MW's.
I took a cell phone charger (states its 9v but measured higher, and at enough mA), removed it from its shell and mounted it to the re-purposed oddball terminal blocks I also recovered. This one ain't very pretty, but I wanted to do a "proof of concept", see it working. And of course it has raised at least one question. Here are pix of the build as it went together: The question is afterward.
raw heatsink: re-used some holes, drilled others, filed the burrs off etc.
...wet sanded with 1000 grit after scribing the locations and drilling the mount holes...
Drilled and tapped (before the final sanding...)
test mounting the vero's
The terminal block is thermoplastic...I bolted it to the side of an outside fin. Then zip tied the supply and the fan power and soldered 'em up.
...my understanding is, these should be wired in series, not parallel. Feel free to correct me if I am wrong. Wired in parallel, they both light up. Wired in series - they don't. When I wire just one COB - it (of course) lights up, and there I measure 1.75 amps of current. Being a constant current driver I will guess that the 3000 mA (3A) rating on the label is way high (duh, its chinese) but it seems like 1.75 should be enough to drive 2 in series. What am I missing (besides my mind), and what would happen if I run them in parallel (damage the COB's, the supply or both?) Not really sure...I'm fair at electronics but this tech is new to me.
Thanks for looking....hopefully other noobs can benefit from this too.
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