stardustsailor
Well-Known Member
The CXA series excels when underdriven. So if the CXA is more efficient than Vero at 2.1A, it is a lot more efficient at 1.4A and more still at .7A. It is also slightly cheaper. According to my math (minimum figures), at .7A the CXA is 49% efficient and the Vero 29 is 37.5% efficient. At .7A the CXA cost $4.05/PAR W and the Vero cost $4.24/PAR W
Because we tend to run our COBs relatively cool and we prefer a wide spread of light, the superior thermal resistance of the Vero package does not come into play, but the superior current droop characteristics of the CXA do. This makes the CXA more suitable to our application IMHO and it shows up very noticeably on paper. For example I have demonstrated that it is cheaper
Some real -life measurements with a PAR meter also ,can easily reveal which one ,actually excels...
..
Also:
Thing is ,that in real life applications ,Vero 29 runs cooler ( 5°C less ,at average ) than the CXA3070 , at same If and at same cooling system.
That alone,makes Vero 29 somewhat superior ,
as it operates at lower Tc ,thus outputing more light.
Still,if one wants to see which Array is more efficient,
all it takes is a reference cooling & driving scheme and then
some radiant power measurements.
I was pretty suprised myself from the outcome.
" Cheaper,easier to find ,easier to install and more efficient..."
Cheers.