Cree design grow light

frica

Well-Known Member
High power leds/ single dies etc. are nice for sellers that buy diodes in high numbers and have the option to reflow solder it to a PCB.
Diodes are relatively expensive when you buy them in small numbers but are cheap when you buy thousands at a time.

COBs are easier for diy and other small scale projects.
 

Boatguy

Well-Known Member
Cob's are easier. My first panel i reflowed individual led's, it was a blurple panel just with a higher percentage of white leds, but reds still being the higher percentage. I was happy with it and it grew well. Heat wasnt a problem and it was passively cooled. That same heatsink with cob's is much hotter and has to be run at a much lower power than when i had the individual diodes.
 

CobKits

Well-Known Member
there is another thread about it.

not a fair test in my opinion as they measure a limited footprint under the fixture, and are catching all of the light from the LED and a fraction of the light from the gavita

in other words dont expect to replace an 1100W gavita with 550W, 750-800ish more like it
 

NaturalFarmer

Well-Known Member
The PCBs are really expensive as is in the reference. The heat sink is incredibly expensive as well. The design should incorporate some XT-E royal blues as well. The 5' height in reference is a little suspect I think and would like to see a much more standard height over a canopy.

I'm looking at the Osram Oslon 80 degree emitters to try to cut down the need for a secondary optic. IMO this reference may get you on the right course with emitters but I think it would be well over a $1000 if you went by the reference model when I priced it out (The PCBs being the highest cost even blank the heat sink being next).

If you can hack the build up, then you could bring the price down.

http://www.osram-os.com/osram_os/en/applications/areas-of-competence/horticulture-lighting/index.jsp
 
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