Thats why i was shotting for aLogical? Maybe. Practical? Not really, considering the cost of 49 citi 1212 gen 6 cobs is in excess of $700. Then you got the cost of mounting, wiring and power - nearly $1k for a 200W light is not very practical.
they most certainly need to be in parallelso you can run 3 cmx22 in series on a HLG-185H-48A driver? I think I asked this before but cant find it.
I think maybe they need to be in parallel?
I understand the parallel / series part, just getting the right driver combo is still foggy. I figured asking here wouldn't be a huge burden on anyone.Could you please inform yourself about choosing the right driver? You need to understand serial and parallel wiring plus how to read the datasheets from the LEDs and the driver.
1000 threads on here and google/youtube will help you as well.
Thanks for the links / help, the wikipedia page looks like a foreign language, the second link makes sense.they most certainly need to be in parallel
heres some good resources
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Series_and_parallel_circuits
https://www.rollitup.org/t/matching-drivers-and-cobs.883866/
understanding fundamentals saves you shocks down the road! ill try to dig up some better links later onthe wikipedia page looks like a foreign language
exactlyI'm not sure how many cobs to run in a 4x4 veg tent because I don't know how the light spreads, is it purely dependant on how much wattage goes to all of them? As in 4 cobs run at a higher wattage can be equivalent to 12 at a lower wattage for example,
Ooooogh, my wallet is crying, I got like 200 to work with for a light maybe 250 tops. But when you say most common I assume that's for a setup that includes flowering as well, would it be safe to assume halving that would work for a veg setup? Thinking maybe 5 cobs in a dice pattern, and I've heard about 200-300 watts will be enough for veg. 560 watts in a 9 set is more than what I need, not to mention can afford lol. But thanks for the input.exactly
for a 4x4 the most common rig is 9 cobs at 60-75W each
~$550
After drilling how to diy cobs I was told that strip leds, like Samsung f series for example provide much better coverage for a similar price dynamic if not less, you have any experience with them? I'm liking the idea but that wider spread has me thinking light penetration might not be as good, any insight on that?going to be a tuff call man. But u do NEED the 9 for better production, unless your able to rotate plants around periodically.
The problem is, to hit a 4x4, you need to raise the light, but your PAR will fall off fast. You can lower it closer to the plants, but you will lose footprint,.. But if you can move your plants around, you can make it happen. Definitly better then 2 mars or something. Im using 4 cobs in a 3x3 and its awesome at 250watts.
Lol sick, and yeah I wasn't sure but logically speaking the strips design wouldn't be as good for my plans, I'm only going to be vegging 4 maybe 5 trees in a 4x4 tent, so that's why I was gonna go for 5 cobs cuz 4 would work but 5 in a dice design let's you move the outer ones a little further because of the central light. But regardless it'll probably be around 240 watts per those 4 (maaaaybe 5, VEG ONLY) plants. You think 1 cob per plant like that would be decent? Trying to stretch a dolla until it rips. Thanks for the feedback and info so fardont get me wrong tho, Strips and or QBs get the job done well also. They get intense also if you, again, suplly enough power to them.
GML just used the QB550 against 1000W, and the QBs outperformed the HPS with half the watts. so theres that,lol.
The idea that "penetration" is solely related to the intensity of the individual emitters is a myth:After drilling how to diy cobs I was told that strip leds, like Samsung f series for example provide much better coverage for a similar price dynamic if not less, you have any experience with them? I'm liking the idea but that wider spread has me thinking light penetration might not be as good, any insight on that?
Hmm, so many factors to consider. I did some light skimming on the strips vs cobs and the strips always cost more, but they have benefits too, but a lot is for like around 30 watts per square foot out of what I was researching, not quite sure what the minimum specs would have to be to veg without underpowering it, on led grower site a lot of the diy strip setups were hitting $500 for 4x4 coverage with 30w ft^2, ahhh my brain is melting, I hate to ask but could you help me out with the cheapest possible 4x4 veg light cuz I really want to go perpetual but I gotta get the tent and supplies in addition to the light so I'm tryna juggle all that, of course my grow is only 2 weeks in so I got over a month to line it up perfectly, my head is too full of cob diy from learning it all in a mad rush and rn I'm likeThe idea that "penetration" is solely related to the intensity of the individual emitters is a myth:
Here is a single theoretical 200W emitter with theoretical perfect 60 degree spread:
View attachment 4122318
The canopy "penetration" area starts at the 1000 uMol level and goes down to the 250 uMol level - two feet of effective penetration in this example
Now if we divide the single 200W emitter into four 50W emitters in a reflective area we get something like this:
View attachment 4122319
The numbers to the right show what a single 50W emitter would put out. As you can see, the 1000 uMol level is fully one foot higher, but the 250 uMol level is still in the same place - we now have 3 feet of "penetration".
And if we further divide the emitters again to get eight 25W emitters, it looks like this:
View attachment 4122321
Again the numbers to the right are the light levels of a single 25W emitter - the colors are shown in the legend on the left. The 1000 uMol level now starts at about 8 inches from the lights, but again, we still have the same 250 uMols at 4 feet down.