Sorry I thought hlg were standardMaybe link exact driver
Anyone ideas what this bit means then? It says constant current region and this one is 18-36Hmmm, afaik, the B model can't alter the voltage.
I know that mate. I just have loads of hlg-600h-36b sitting not being used that I’d like to use for these strips.The voltage is 36. You want an HLG-600-24
What you look at is it's Amps OUTPUT. The divide that number with however many strips you want to use.
25amps on the HLG-600-24. So if you use 25 strips, they'll each receive 1amp(1,000ma)
50 strips, 0.5amps(500ma)
And so on...
There are no trimmers, only 3-in-1 external dimming.Put a meter on the output leads and adjust the trimmers. Check to see if you can get the output to your needed values. Don't forget under load the values will drop slightly.
If you can get them down to around 20 volts I'd hook up a strip and see what happens...lol
But then again I'm running some LEDS with a bridge rect and a few ceramic resistors atm...lol
Do you know what it means by the voltage range in the photo I posted?He's talk about the forward voltage guys.
He has a b version, the vF does not adjust
Are you sure about this? I don’t want to fry new strips. How does it work? Will it mean the driver outputs less than 600w?All HLG drivers will adjust their voltage automatically to match what the LEDs want. A/B/AB, all the same, it will adjust.
Never considered the Q series how do they compare to the f series?So basically you would have 23v X 16.7amps not making full use of the driver (384w) but making use of it none the less..?
That's the way I always thought It worked with these drivers but im second guessing myself now.
A way to get more out of it would be to usea 12v strip in series parallel , like the 1ft Samsung Q series.
3 x 1ft strip per series then parallel the fuck out it.
To quote LED gardener.Never considered the Q series how do they compare to the f series?
Yeh was just looking at them at digikey total cost sky rocketed using thoseTo quote LED gardener.
"Samsung’s Q-Series uses the current top-dog of diodes: the LM301B. These diodes are rated at over 200 lumens per watt, vs. the 187 lumens per watt that the LM561C is rated for. The Q-Series strips are still quite new, and, as such, are more expensive than the H-Series and F-Series strips. They also have the lowest diode count per strip, which does matter in medium to large sized builds.
Opposite of the H-Series, the Q-Series strips all have the same max current, but the typical voltage across each length is different
LT-Q282A (20 Diodes, 4 Series x 5 Parallel, Voltage = ~12V, Max Current = 1,000mA)
3000K: SI-B8V051280US
3500K: SI-B8U051280US
4000K: SI-B8T051280US
5000K: SI-B8R051280US"