Tasty-LED T2-2100 Review

Airwalker16

Well-Known Member
Dude, Airwalker16... Either those plants are doing horribly or they ain't weed. They look placed next to large windows so I'm assuming they aren't pot plants. ;)
They're Heirloom tomatoes man... if you can't tell that they aren't weed, then I don't know what to tell ya...
 

JJFOURTWENTY

Well-Known Member
I was gonna say.. with a power hungry chiller running too?? wtf?!?

Anyways, the PLC CX300 lists for $750. The Tasty T2-2100 is 360 and the T3-2100 is $530. Both running the latest and greatest CXB3590's vs. the slightly older-tech (6) 3070's the CX300 features is a pretty fair comparison, no?
 

Airwalker16

Well-Known Member
I was gonna say.. with a power hungry chiller running too?? wtf?!?

Anyways, the PLC CX300 lists for $750. The Tasty T2-2100 is 360 and the T3-2100 is $530. Both running CXB3590's vs. the CX300's (6) 3070's is a pretty fair comparison, no?
Wow. I didn't realize it was $170 more for one more cob, lens, and fan.
 

JJFOURTWENTY

Well-Known Member
I almost bought the CX300 (might still do whenever it's back in stock) as some say the 3070's spectrum is slightly more ideal for flowering.. however, Rahz's seeming quest for efficiency is what sold me in the end. Plus I really need the LED to run side by side with HID. I'm too afraid penetration of the canopy will be lacking relying solely on LED for flowering.
 

Rahz

Well-Known Member
Wow. I didn't realize it was $170 more for one more cob, lens, and fan.
Along with $20 more in aluminum, more holes to drill and tap, etc. The profit on the T3 is about $160. The only way I can justify selling the smaller lamps is by selling the larger lamps. I clear $45 off a T1-2100. The larger the lamp, the less per PAR watt though. T2-2100 is about 4.80 per par watt, T3-2100 is about 4.70 per par watt. It might be the cheapest par watt of any Cree/Bridgelux cob lamp on the market currently, and running at 50% output efficiency. It's not a bad deal.
 

Airwalker16

Well-Known Member
Along with $20 more in aluminum, more holes to drill and tap, etc. The profit on the T3 is about $160. The only way I can justify selling the smaller lamps is by selling the larger lamps. I clear $45 off a T1-2100. The larger the lamp, the less per PAR watt though. T2-2100 is about 4.80 per par watt, T3-2100 is about 4.70 per par watt. It might be the cheapest par watt of any Cree/Bridgelux cob lamp on the market currently, and running at 50% output efficiency. It's not a bad deal.
And I'm not saying that is a bad price at all. It just would make more sense to buy 2 t2s
 

Rahz

Well-Known Member
That's cool. It just depends. In a 2x4 it would be a lower cost solution, or a good solution for a 2x3, or a high intensity setup using 3 of them in a 4x4. Options are good.
 
Hey Rahz, if i wanted to swap the lenses on my unit for conical reflectors like the ones discussed earlier, how would i go about that and how much would it set me back? Can i get them through Tasty or is there a supplier i could look at?
 

Rahz

Well-Known Member
The sink would need to be drilled and tapped for both cob holder and reflector holder. Cobs would need to be desoldered and removed from the sink before that which could damage them. DC wiring would need to be replaced.

If you pay shipping I would have no problem trading for a lamp with reflectors, but it's only a couple of percent difference. In practice I don't think you would see much difference in the final product.
 
Thanks for the advice. Its definitely not sub-par by any means, in its current configuration. It might work out better having a wider angle lens, for side lighting sake, especially because of how reflective the walld of my cab are. I dont think that my plants mind much.
 

dubekoms

Well-Known Member
My first real indoor grow to so things could have gone a lot better. Next grow will be even better! Definitely recommend this light for those who grow in smaller spaces and don't wanna worry about heat :bigjoint:
 

Rahz

Well-Known Member
yes specifically this lamp: http://www.tastyled.com/Tasty-T1-2100-LED-Grow-Light-p/t1-2100r.htm

Wanting to daisy chain them the a/c output seems to be 120 only. Wondering if i can run 120v cords for daisy chaining and the final cord to the wall be 240v. All my wall outlets are 240v.
It will work but it's not proper and not something I can say "Yea go for it" about. Proper would be using 240v rated cords. I supply 240v daisy cords with multiple lamps. A repeat customer could also ask for one.
 
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