samsung hard strips

MrTwist1

Well-Known Member
there are many times you can make a driver work with some thought. In this case, the driver is 1/3 the price of normal, so I'm willing to put in the extra thought. You are right about current, but it is also adjustable via internal potentiometer down to 2A if needed. In my post, I mentioned 4 x 48V strips. This is a 48V 4A driver, so i was implying that you would run them in parallel.
Ahhh Ok, I did not even consider that. I have only ever run LEDs in series so far.
 

caretak3r

Well-Known Member
Ahhh Ok, I did not even consider that. I have only ever run LEDs in series so far.
My apologies, I guess I should have spelled it out. Someone else PM'd me and had attached 1 L09 to 1 HLG-185H-48A. I believe he inadvertently ran 1 strip @ 4A which isn't advisable (it was a short test I think). I'd run 4X L09 per hlg-185h-48a or 16 (4s4p) of the s02.
 

MrTwist1

Well-Known Member
I'm leaning towards an HLG-80H-C700 or HLG-120H-C1050 to run two of the L09 for a small veg space, although I'd rather find an alternative driver cos they are not cheap.
 

PSUAGRO.

Well-Known Member
@Chronikool,

If you want to build your own nextlight mini 150 type light, check out the pricing above and pair it with one of these:
http://www.bgmicro.com/hlg-185h-48a-led-series-power-supply-48v-3-9a-constant-current-high-efficiency-by-meanwell.aspx
meanwell hlg-185h-48a for only $23.

let's say you grab 4X the influx l09s @ 17.17 that's only $68, plus $4 shipping. Add the Driver and you're at roughly $100 for lights and drivers. Sounds much more appealing than $600 for a mini :)
your also paying for ul/etl approval on the nextlight mini.............you do realize that if your diy project(s) fail/catch fire, damages aren't covered by your homeowner's/business insurance right? some will pay extra for peace of mind.............if it's an illegal grow none of this matters anyway..........lol
 

caretak3r

Well-Known Member
your also paying for ul/etl approval on the nextlight mini.............you do realize that if your diy project(s) fail/catch fire, damages aren't covered by your homeowner's/business insurance right? some will pay extra for peace of mind.............if it's an illegal grow none of this matters anyway..........lol
I'm not knocking a good product. I'm delighted to see that quality samsung SMDs can grow nice plants and NextLight proved that out. I understand certification costs money and time. I also have an automatic temperature-based fire extinguisher in my cab -- So I guess you can add $50 to the cost if you want the same assurances :)
 

PSUAGRO.

Well-Known Member
I'm not knocking a good product. I'm delighted to see that quality samsung SMDs can grow nice plants and NextLight proved that out. I understand certification costs money and time. I also have an automatic temperature-based fire extinguisher in my cab.
me too:)...................but my pressure gauge hasn't moved in 5 +yrs, normal?
 

caretak3r

Well-Known Member
I'm leaning towards an HLG-80H-C700 or HLG-120H-C1050 to run two of the L09 for a small veg space, although I'd rather find an alternative driver cos they are not cheap.
@robincnn uses 48V laptop power supplies (constant voltage ac/dc adapters). I've always read that is bad due to possibility of thermal runaway, but I guess you can mitigate that by buying a power supply that is not over powered (max output can't damage the lights). He's got more experience in this area.
 

caretak3r

Well-Known Member
I'd like to see the mini 150 come down to about $300. That would put it more inline with the some of the other commercial offerings out there.
 

caretak3r

Well-Known Member
A quick update - I'm pleasantly surprised so far. I attached a single 33W strip to a 20x14 baking sheet. I dialed in voltage/amperage on a dc-dc buck to get 34W at the wall, let it run for 10 minutes, took temperature readings on black tape on the rear side of the sheet. Ambient was 76F, right behind the led strip was only 10 degrees higher at 86F. Taking a reading about 2 inches to the side of the strip was back to ambient. So this strip at rated/nominal current is dissipating heat very well. I will attach my second strip and take more readings, but I'm kind of in love with this setup if it remains so easy to keep things cool. Props to nextlight and those like @robincnn that blazed the path on this one.
 

Attachments

OneHitDone

Well-Known Member
A quick update - I'm pleasantly surprised so far. I attached a single 33W strip to a 20x14 baking sheet. I dialed in voltage/amperage on a dc-dc buck to get 34W at the wall, let it run for 10 minutes, took temperature readings on black tape on the rear side of the sheet. Ambient was 76F, right behind the led strip was only 10 degrees higher at 86F. Taking a reading about 2 inches to the side of the strip was back to ambient. So this strip at rated/nominal current is dissipating heat very well. I will attach my second strip and take more readings, but I'm kind of in love with this setup if it remains so easy to keep things cool. Props to nextlight and those like @robincnn that blazed the path on this one.
So your saying Nextlight is using Samsung Strips and not Cree diodes?
 

caretak3r

Well-Known Member
Ok, let's do some maths....

the 16 strips i referenced were different -- they are influx s02s, each with 24 lm301a (different higher power led), running 12.1V and 16W. I mentioned using 16 in a 4p4s config to fill up the available power from a HLG-185h-48a (185W driver). In this case, you are well over powering the nextlight mini 150w. The influx s02 costs $4.88 each, let's round to $5. $5x 16 = $80 plus $23 for the discounted HLG from bgmicro only brings you a hair over $100. A large 18x26 baking sheet = $15..... so this is apples to oranges because of different diodes, but it is very similar.

My testing was done with a 33W strip using 72 lm561b (same as nextlight). To match nextlight power, I only need 5 of them but I'd order 6 so I can do 2P to hit my 48V from the driver. So, 6 X $11 = $66 plus the $23 driver and you are under $100 still.

the nextlight mini is 150W for $600. I'm not hating on them, they are just making a healthy profit as far as I can tell (again I concede testing and certification and warranty counts and costs). I like DIY and I like to know what the basic parts cost.
 

OneHitDone

Well-Known Member
Ok, let's do some maths....

the 16 strips i referenced were different -- they are influx s02s, each with 24 lm301a (different higher power led), running 12.1V and 16W. I mentioned using 16 in a 4p4s config to fill up the available power from a HLG-185h-48a (185W driver). In this case, you are well over powering the nextlight mini 150w. The influx s02 costs $4.88 each, let's round to $5. $5x 16 = $80 plus $23 for the discounted HLG from bgmicro only brings you a hair over $100. A large 18x26 baking sheet = $15..... so this is apples to oranges because of different diodes, but it is very similar.

My testing was done with a 33W strip using 72 lm561b (same as nextlight). To match nextlight power, I only need 5 of them but I'd order 6 so I can do 2P to hit my 48V from the driver. So, 6 X $11 = $66 plus the $23 driver and you are under $100 still.

the nextlight mini is 150W for $600. I'm not hating on them, they are just making a healthy profit as far as I can tell (again I concede testing and certification and warranty counts and costs). I like DIY and I like to know what the basic parts cost.
Thanks, for clarifying. When I searched that lm561B all I saw was individual diodes. are those available already installed on strips?
I am thinking lettuce growing machine here ;)
Probably don't need the diodes packed so tightly or as much wattage as what you are putting together
 

caretak3r

Well-Known Member
Thanks, for clarifying. When I searched that lm561B all I saw was individual diodes. are those available already installed on strips?
I am thinking lettuce growing machine here ;)
Probably don't need the diodes packed so tightly or as much wattage as what you are putting together
Yes all of the links in this thread are for strips.

data sheet for influx series (I don't have these yet but am pretty confident they will perform very similarly in terms of heat dissipation):
http://www.samsung.com/global/business/business-images/led/file/product/lighting/201604/Data_Sheet_inFlux_Linear_Rev.1.0.pdf
 
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