any DIY heat pipes?

Airwalker16

Well-Known Member

Shugglet

Well-Known Member
i want to fully utilize all of my vertical space so i want small lights. I dono
Heat pipes simply move heat quickly from point A to B, you still have to do something with that heat when it gets to point B.

What is wrong with a normal aluminum heatsink without heat pipes? The ones people build on this forum are already quite thin.
 

Imaulle

Well-Known Member
Heat pipes simply move heat quickly from point A to B, you still have to do something with that heat when it gets to point B.

What is wrong with a normal aluminum heatsink without heat pipes? The ones people build on this forum are already quite thin.
all the data I've seen suggests they work much much better. esp if they are made from copper. the copper heatsinks / pipes to aluminum fins is what I want
 

ttystikk

Well-Known Member
I think 8 total COBs in a 4' x 4' running them at 100 watt each
You get substantial PAR output per watt improvements if you run less wattage through the chip. Even 75W per chip is significant, and less watts means less cooling required.
 

Airwalker16

Well-Known Member
i want to fully utilize all of my vertical space so i want small lights. I dono
I'd reccomend extruded bars then brutha. You can run 4 on a 36" 5.886" profile heatsink usa setup at 64watts ec (hlg-240h-c1750) with 2 140mm fans on top with almost NO heat. It's a total of like 3" wide maybe if you run bare cobs without any optics. (Reflectors/Lenses)
 

Danielson999

Well-Known Member
all the data I've seen suggests they work much much better. esp if they are made from copper. the copper heatsinks / pipes to aluminum fins is what I want
Some have used those heatsinks with LED setups and not had as great a success as they hoped. Mounting the cob to the copper and aluminum tubing is also difficult because it's not properly level and has cracks between the tubes where they join. I see you want a plate between them but how well is that plate going to transfer that heat to the copper and aluminum tubing and into the fins? I understand your desire to do something somewhat different or neat looking but I don't think you'll get the desired effect you're looking for. I think you'd be better off getting pin heatsinks or the extruded variety like so many here have used. Instead of risking your time and money on something that might not work well, why not insure you get the cooling effect your setup will need running those cobs so hot.
 
Top