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Registered Member #4266
Joined: Fri Dec 16 2011, 03:15AM
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Posts: 874
Hi I'm think about using these and was wondering how much power would they dissipate as heat, if wired in series(4 of them)? They are 3.6 forward voltage, does that mean I need >14.4 for 4 of them to work, or will the light be less.
Any extra info about LEDs would be helpful, complete newbie :)
Registered Member #4266
Joined: Fri Dec 16 2011, 03:15AM
Location:
Posts: 874
Hi , the LEDs are High Power LEDs - Single Color Blue 455-465nm 200lm @ 3.15A Luminus Devices High Power LEDs - Single Color Red 619-623nm 475lm @ 3.15A Luminus Devices
A grow light company say they use LEDs at 450nm and 630nm, these were the closest, and what they were selling about 90watts covers 1m3.
With constant current would a resistor make it, if the power supply can supply more amps than the resistor limits it to?
This might not sound like the brightest idea, but was thinking mains to a battery 12 or 24volt, was just going to test 1m3 to see if the thing will work.
Registered Member #162
Joined: Mon Feb 13 2006, 10:25AM
Location: United Kingdom
Posts: 3140
For info. on LED try typing LED into Wikipedia search box.......
I find that it is always easier to drive LEDs in series with series resistance or constant current, the main problems are that an open circuit anywhere in the chain causes failure and possibly high voltage on LEDs concerns. BUT, if you have a spare/safe/reliable power supply that gives say 5V at up to 20A then one resistor per LED is good. For a typical PC psu you could 'use up' all available power by also putting three in series with a resistor for +12v, -12v etc...you may already have an old PC PSU. For 5 V supply, R = (5 - 3.25)/3.15 = 0.5555 Ohms, 5.5 W, use 0.56 Ohm 10 W per LED. Due to all sorts of variations the actual current will be as designed, but close enough. For 12V 3 series LED plus 0.71 Ohms, 7.1 W, e.g. 2x (1.5 Ohm 7 Watt) in parallel. Inefficient but cheap, easy, reliable and an extra source of heat?
1 Watt of green light = 683 lumens, so 200 lumen is about 0.3 Watts of light, the rest is heat...etc. e.g. 3.25V x 3.15A = 10.2375 W, -0.3 W = 9.9375 W = 10 W of heat.
P.S. 10 W is a lot of heat to remove continuously, especially if the ambient temperature is high, LEDs don't live long if hot. the most important part of the project is heat management I suspect.
Registered Member #2939
Joined: Fri Jun 25 2010, 04:25AM
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Posts: 615
Multiple lower power leds are easier to power and heat manage than single high power leds. Since you are doing area illumination i don't see any need to use high power leds. There are plenty of efficient switchmode LED drivers around for currents up to ~1A - RECOM make some nice ones
Registered Member #2529
Joined: Thu Dec 10 2009, 02:43AM
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Posts: 600
Last time I drove a bunch of LEDS (about 60 LEDs or something), I chained them up in groups and made a constant current source with a transistor on the end of each chain and ran it off a 12 volt wall wart. I used one of the LEDs instead of a zener on each chain; that one ran a bit darker due to the voltage drop through the transistor, but it still basically worked.
Registered Member #4266
Joined: Fri Dec 16 2011, 03:15AM
Location:
Posts: 874
Thanks you lot for the replies, I've being trying to find a source of LEDs that will output the same power as ,at a cheaper price, so far not much luck, theirs these two , but the second one works out to about 0.13lm . I'll need 35,000 of them.
Is there a cheaper way rather than buy the above 90watt source?
Registered Member #4266
Joined: Fri Dec 16 2011, 03:15AM
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Posts: 874
Hi Sulaiman Reading up it says 50-90lm is a watt of light, 683lm seems abit high?. There are these that might workout, a 24volt battery bank might not fluctuate to much would a 1.7ohm resistor be all thats needed with one of the strips in series?
Hi Shrad Thinking about it, just not wanting to get to much traffic to a site like that, if I do start to grow indoors.
Hi BigBad I was hoping for something really easy, not necessary efficient, like just a resistor, but thanks I might have to go that way.
Hi 2Spoons The above links have a driver to go with them, 4.2amp 24volt ac-dc, but it will make the price reach close to buying from ,will keep searching.
Registered Member #2529
Joined: Thu Dec 10 2009, 02:43AM
Location:
Posts: 600
The resistors do work, but they're not temperature compensated, and they're not very efficient; using the LED/transistor like that gives you automatic current compensation. It's not a very complicated circuit, with care you could probably run it straight off rectified, smoothed AC with no other regulation.
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