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Does anybody have some freshfish or similar high CRI white cobs laying around that they'd sell me? Having trouble finding 90+ CRI cobs in a kelvin that I want and that are sold as singles.
Side note: I wish the DIY LED scene wasn't dead. It's a fun hobby within a hobby, but seems like there is very little interest these days.
Right now I've got two LED clusters on each light and each cluster has one 3500k or one 4000k CLU048-1212. They are way too big and too warm, so I'm thinking if I switched all of them to something smaller that's at least 4000k and high CRI then things will look a bit better. Not only do I have the trim pot turned down about half way on my driver boards, but I'm only running these cobs at like 3-5% max during the day lol.What kelvin are you looking for ?
Yes but good luck finding any of them.Right now I've got two LED clusters on each light and each cluster has one 3500k or one 4000k CLU048-1212. They are way too big and too warm, so I'm thinking if I switched all of them to something smaller that's at least 4000k and high CRI then things will look a bit better. Not only do I have the trim pot turned down about half way on my driver boards, but I'm only running these cobs at like 3-5% max during the day lol.
Replacements that I'm looking at are Luxeon SunPlus, Bridgelux vero/BXRE/BXRH, Cree CXA/CXB, or Citizen CLU028-1204. I see that oreo5457 found the freshfish sold individually and I had actually seen that listing before, but the price seems a bit unreasonable when they're listed elsewhere for ~$12 (albeit out of stock) and there are the alternatives listed about which are much cheaper.
I'm interested in your light build,got a thread ?Thanks for the info, I wasn't aware of those luminus cobs. Not sure they would work for my set up though. What color temp would you recommend? Each cluster has a Luxeon k16 royal blue, a 3-up with a mix of violet from 400nm to 430nm, and a 3-up with one luxeon Rebel ES cool blue and two Rebel ES cyan. I've also got another 3 up I can add which has either two blue and a cyan, or two cyan and a blue. I can't remember which it is lol.
No, pretty much just what I've posted in this thread. There's a pic in this post and details in posts before and after it: https://www.reef2reef.com/threads/general-diy-led-thread.534238/page-26#post-7041612I'm interested in your light build,got a thread ?
OK first your goals?No, pretty much just what I've posted in this thread. There's a pic in this post and details in posts before and after it: https://www.reef2reef.com/threads/general-diy-led-thread.534238/page-26#post-7041612
* MIXING LIST
----------------------------------------
LED Blue (470nm) [120°] x2
LED Cyan (500nm) [120°] x1
LED Green (530nm) [120°] x2
LED Amber (590nm) [120°] x2
LED Red (630nm) [120°] x2
----------------------------------------
* SIMULATION DATA
----------------------------------------
Luminous flux : 540 lm
Radiant flux : 2,049 mW
PPF : 9.3 umol/s
TCP : 6670 K
CRI : 87
λp : 633 nm
Color : #FFAEC5
* MIXING LIST
----------------------------------------
LED Blue (470nm) [120°] x2
LED Cyan (500nm) [120°] x1
LED Green (530nm) [120°] x1
LED Amber (590nm) [120°] x1
LED Red (630nm) [120°] x1
----------------------------------------
* SIMULATION DATA
----------------------------------------
Luminous flux : 330 lm
Radiant flux : 1,471 mW
PPF : 6.5 umol/s
TCP : 16670 K
CRI : 57
λp : 472 nm
Color : #9DA2FF
----------------------------------------
Glad to see you back on here. I was just looking at the perkint controller thread on ultimate reef. I'm disappointed it died before anyone got something going with the ESP8266 as that's what I'm using and it's working well for me. I was actually looking at that thread because I'm using EasyEDA for the first time in an attempt to emulate the LM3414HV PCBs from MrMan with the onboard ESP8266. I'm also working on designing a stripped down version that can be slaved to an ESP8266 master PCB or hooked up to a Storm X/Bluefish Mini. I know nothing of circuit or PCB design so it's taking a ton of research, but I am making progress. I was thinking of starting a thread here so I could get input from others with much more experience. I'm not sure there would be much interest though.I haven't been following the discussion for a while (crazy year!!!) But thought some of you may find it useful that Rapid LED is selling their heatsinks from the Corona fixture separate now-
Could be nice for some sleeker looking builds.
I picked up a 180 gallon reef ready for $400 with stand for our new house (!) But it'll be a freshwater planted setup. I may post the build here when the time comes it it still needs to be cleaned up and brought in from the garage for plumbing and everything else first.
I'm going to go back and read the last few pages here today
OK first your goals?
You pretty well hammered the blue spread..
DISCLAIMER. I dabble, consult and build freshwater arrays (hobbyist level) and dabble in theoretical saltwater arrays as a err intellectual pursuit. The suggestions are based on the best of my ability and numerous years of research. Coral lighting is pretty well a bit of an incomplete book though.
Freshwater is simpler and fewer acceptable "looks"
That said really you are only adding visual appeal for yourself.
You could do anything from high PAR white to make like 8000-12000K lights or just enough to add color for your missing frequencies.
Technically all one would need is to add a simulated white via RGB diodes ala Lassi.
Since you have plenty of blue and cyan is a fair substitute for green all you are missing is "red".
But not recommended to add just red.
But a couple of questions first.
What is your channel arrangement?
3 ups in series?
Now my instinct is to pair another 3 up (seperate channel but in series) with your cool blue 2x cyan with your missing colors.
Like so..
Problem is with series diodes one may have output mismatched skewing the simulation.
Advantage is you don't add yellow,
NOTE that is the two 3 ups paired.
There are a million combinations possible.
There are more fun diodes to use like PCAmber and Lime but since this is sort of experimental...
See amber and lime in Orpheks, Radions, and Coralcare.
Metal Halides spike in amber and green and technically they don't use "white" like LED (yellow phosphor blue pump).
Just my 2 cents.
If you look back you will find some builds using this sort of arrangement.
No guarantees though.
Note I used regular red, could substitute deep red (660nm) for it.
Will shift the Kelvin temp of the 6 combined higher .
Also note first one uses a 1: 2 ratio of blue/cyan to amber/red/green.
and K12 blue and violet 3 ups are just your "blue" channel.
Should have some cyan in it so this is a bit of a compromise.
Above is your "white" channel so to speak.
4 channels
K12
Violets
blue/cyan
Ancillary channel
Normally I'd not include any "normal" green due to it's inefficiency but.. well just spitballing here.
How many people have tried this after reading the thread? I did it this evening. I run GHL Mitras 7206. I dropped the 7700k and the 6200k white lights down to about 20%. I increased red to 50% and green to around 40%. It's an increadible visual difference
Heat sinks are sort of an art, or really complicated science..Do you guys feel like about 20 leds driven at 700mah at 76 degrees ambient air temp I could use passive cooling ? I know that Rapids description says 75-90w but idk about that.
16cm x 16cm sq for 42.6WRegarding the surface area that dissipates the heat to the air, we can apply another rule of thumb that says approximately 6cm2 of surface area can dissipate about 1W into the air.