nevergoodenuf
Well-Known Member
My new light has dimmable power supplies. Where do I buy the dimmer. Will I have to order it or would a store like Fry's have them?
Even with the little bit of 28gauge fused between the connector and the 18 gauge wire? It's about half an inch or so.There would be no problem running it at 92% load. If anything you might get a slight boost in efficiency.
Because it will be a high voltage circuit a small wire can get a lot done. As long as the jacket of your wiring is rated above the voltage of your circuit, 18 gauge will be more than enough because it is only carrying 700mA and probably not a very long distance.
No hiding another newb question but can anyone suggest the most efficient way to run a single cxa3070 from 12v (at a decent power output, 1400ma+ the more the better, I have excess solar + going to waste but it's limited) Would I be better wiring the batteries to amp up voltage (48V?) or a sine wave convertor, I see they are not very efficient at all. The meanwell drivers I have are lpc 60-1400 & 1050 I (now) have... to dip my toes... need 90v min startup it seems. Or could they run directly through some sort of resistor. I want to make a light bar but have access to a bank of batteries all running at 12v and largely power to waste... could use a 12v veg light ; )
Taz- I have used a car battery and an 750w inverter, from HarborFreight, to power my room when the power was out. Needed it for a few hours and worked fine. Sounds like you could run everything off your 12v source.
So the HLG-185H-C1050A you say is capped at 190V. Say you dim it to 700mA, Does it allow you to use a higher voltage closer to the 286V the -C700A would be capped at?The Mean Well maxes out at 143V. So if you run it at maximum current (~1500mA) you could only run 3 CXA3070s. The 143V limit is a hard cap, we found this out from the HLG-185H-C1050A.
MrFlux says when you use less voltage it opens up more current, though I thought the current would have been capped at 1.4A.The Mean Well HLG-185H-C1400A driver...
The light is adjustable from 74W to 210W (230V AC power), or 67.3W to 198.9W LED power. This means the driver at max power is over 94% efficient, which agrees nicely with the spec. The other nice thing about this driver is that although it is rated for 1.4A @ 143V, it will give a higher current at lower voltages (up to a point), so as to maintain 200W output power. For this light it's 1.528A @ 130.2V. It's as if Mean Well thought "hey you payed for 200W so that's what we're gonna give you". Very thoughtful.
Awesome find thnx!the Meanwell LDH-45A-1050W ($11 @ Jameco). It is a dimmable DC constant current step up driver that will output up to 43v @ 1050mA. I don't know of any that will do 1400mA+ but they probably exist.
190vf remains the cap, but when dimmed the COBs have a lower vF so you can squeeze more of them on the string. Yes I believe if you dim the C1400A you could fit 4 3070s, although I am not sure how far you would have to dim it. If it is below 1150mA then you would be better off with a C1050A (which outputs up to 1150mA at 191vF).So the HLG-185H-C1050A you say is capped at 190V. Say you dim it to 700mA, Does it allow you to use a higher voltage closer to the 286V the -C700A would be capped at?
Basically what I am asking is if I dim the HLG-185H-C1400* down a bit could a run 4 cxa's off it?
The inverter is good for a power outage but if you want to permanently power it from 12vdc, a better way would probably be to get a DC step up driver. Converting from 12vdc to 120vac to 42vdc seems inefficient, your already running DC from the solar just use something like the Meanwell LDH-45A-1050W ($11 @ Jameco). It is a dimmable DC constant current step up driver that will output up to 43v @ 1050mA. I don't know of any that will do 1400mA+ but they probably exist.
The drivers in your fixture are the Meanwell HLG-240H-48B which can easily be dimmed with a 100K ohm pot but since there are 2 of them in the fixture your going to want to get a 50K pot to control them both at once. The problem I am seeing with the above picture is the wire colors, according to the spec sheet the dim wires are blue(+) and white(-). Your wires seem to be brown(+) and blue(-) if I'm reading that blue wire correctly (0-10v -). Those must be a lead wire connected to the blue/white coming from the driver, but is it connected to both drivers? You might have to follow the wire to check.My new light has dimmable power supplies. Where do I buy the dimmer. Will I have to order it or would a store like Fry's have them?
Sounds like an awesome combo, would still be difficult (costly) to run a lot of power, but highly efficient LED's and DIY solar sounds like an opportunity for some enhancement, or a slam dunk for running low-draw or temporary lights like initiatorsTaz you should do a thread giving a rundown on your solar panels: parts, connections, ratings and such. You'd be taking up responsibility answering (at least) my dumbass questions but I'm sure there are a few of us that have wanted/would want to start something.
Props to you for taking the steps to be electrically savvy.
Both are efficient emitters - there is a great thread on here called "cxa analysis" to see a good comparison.few CXA3070 versus many XM-L2. Go!