pop22
Well-Known Member
54v is a percentage of 120v. 120/54= 0.45 or 45%. The AC side will use 45% of the 2.1 amps. 2.1 x .45 = 0.945a
120v x .945a= 113.4 watts. now an actual reading at the wall will be more because of driver and wiring losses. Running at 50% capacity, the driver is less efficient than it is when ran above 90% capacity. So let's say total efficiency is 90%. that means the draw will be 10% more than the 113.4
113.4 x 1.10+ 124.74 watts. So actual draw at the wall should be aproximately 125 watts for a DC load of 113.4
120v x .945a= 113.4 watts. now an actual reading at the wall will be more because of driver and wiring losses. Running at 50% capacity, the driver is less efficient than it is when ran above 90% capacity. So let's say total efficiency is 90%. that means the draw will be 10% more than the 113.4
113.4 x 1.10+ 124.74 watts. So actual draw at the wall should be aproximately 125 watts for a DC load of 113.4
Back in 2017, which is when they were discussing this, they were talking about a HLG-320h-54a driver. If you hook up one qb288v2 to that driver, and set the DC voltage so that you pull 2100ma at the board, the board will use 102.82 watts, according to HLG.
If AC current and DC current were the same then the driver would pull, 120 vac x 2.1amps = 252 watts. We know the driver is using a lot less than 252 watts to output 102.82 watts to the board.