When we made the change from HPS to LED, it was a long road full of lots of research. SO much so, I ended up purchasing a PAR meter and started hitting up the light displays from any grow shop I could find, comparing reading from our baseline-1000 watt HPS single ended lights.
Without mentioning names, the ONLY LED that caught my eye through the lens of a PAR meter were the HLG Quantum boards. SO much so, I began digging into "why" they performed so well. What due diligence led me to indicated it wasn't HLG that performed so well, it was the Samsung LM-301 LED diodes that did the trick. I then purchased a watt meter and went to see what I was drawing at the plug, because aside all fanciful claims, a watt is a watt...or is it?
Anyway, we needed 32 of their "1000 watt replacements" and I could neither reach them by phone or by email, so I went to work. Surely HLG isn't the only one using a Samsung chip for their lighting, right?
After much internet searching, I came across a company called
Atreum Lighting that used the Samsung LM301's and begin digging into their offerings. First thing that impressed me was not so much their boards...but the frame they used to hold each of the four "Quantum" boards. It reminds me of an adult Erector Set, and does a few things the competition didn't think about.
1. I can move all four boards around on the frame for a perfect lighting footprint. Each plant gets it's own board, and each board is driven at 137.5 watts or 550 watts at the plug for each light, PLENTY of 3k lighting to exceed 1 gram per watt. I don't even need to argue about it. We've proven it several times.
2. Unlike HLG who basically screws four Quantum boards to a 1/4" thick piece of aluminum plate. This "plate" or heatsink is just a piece of flat aluminum with no heat dissipation fins. Worse still is the LED driver is surface bolted to that very same plate, and when the light is on, there is a LOT of heat from the Quantum boards being transferred directly into the driver, something sure to shorten the life. IF I had HLG's, I'd at least put standoffs between the driver and the heatsink.
Since I needed 32 of them, price was taken into account and NOBODY came close, though we did have to assemble them ourselves.
In closing, carefully chosen, you can't go wrong with LED, and when we were able to PROVE they performed as well (they perform BETTER) than 1000 watt HPS, they not only saved a chunk in electrical costs, but reduced our cooling requirements to 6 tons per 40'x22'x10' room running 32 lights per room with large Anden dehumidifier, fan and pumps and Co2.
Good Luck!