Since the driver is not a constant voltage (I thought it was and your response made me go back and look) the chips or whatever is hooked to it will only draw the voltage needed resulting in a lower wattage?
they are constant voltage/constant current. if your load can take all the current, voltage will drop according to array demand (see chart on datasheet). cobs at a given current can ONLY operate at the corresponding voltage per datasheet
Does this mean that if using a driver with an adjustable but constant drive voltage (hlg-320h)
i assume you mean something like hlg-320h-48A, etc as opposed to HLG-320h-C1400A
it would be more efficient (both with power consumption and light generation) to drive at the lowest possible voltage to ignite the led?
LEDs are *always* more efficient than run softer. most driver efficiencies are pretty flat down to 50% load so even if you reduce the load a bit, driver efficiency loss should be imperceptible (92 vs 94% or whatever). the cob efficiency bump will trump that by a significant margin.
I know there are some stats in the cree data sheets but it seemed lumen generation was more or less tied to the ability to maintain a lower operating temperature and pushing the chip harder, not necessarily more efficiently.
every cob data sheet shows relative flux vs current. and they are all a curve, meaning at lower currents the lumen/watt (PAR/watt) increases. thats why people dont attempt to run cobs full tilt
but you are right, its all about temperature. even if you keep your heatsink at teh same temp, at higher currents there is more heat for the cob to move from dies to chip to heatsink so current is a major factor
edit: to answer my own question (sort of) since I am not able (or at least confident enough) to measure dc side voltage
thats a $10 voltmeter measuring a relatively safe circuit. i would consider the ability to measure DC voltage fundamental to DIYing cobs. there are tons of vids on youtube demonstrating how to use a voltmeter and you can always ask here
Sweet spot is somewhere, hoping
@CobKits already knows where.
sweet spot is determined by your budget. for a given total rig wattage, the more chips you use, the lower the current per chip, the more efficient the rig is
700-1750 mA are popular currents for growers