Z
Zakk
Guest
Not a problem, I'm in byron, can likely explain them a lot better in person anyway, and as long as you're fairly handy with soldering you should do fine (and likely do a much neater job of the wiring too) 
Zakk link said:I'm using the led's from rapid led.
I went with a mix of white and royal blues, although it doesn't hurt to throw an extra blue in the mix. Those are 12 LEd's per 9\" hear sink (so I can direct the light better). 80 degree lenses up the par value. I then grabbed an 'actinic' pack from the site and up it onto a 12\" stip heatsink.
The setups are neat. You can buy a dimmable setup, and you could wire 12 blue to one driver and 12 white to another, then change the output of each colour until you have your perfect mix. I did 6 and 6 on each heatsink so that each sink has its own driver (easy to diagnose and replace). It's a bugger to solder everything, but all told I spent about $1K on everything, and now pretty much every bit of it can be replaced (although each LED is rated for thousnds of hours use). So after that outlay, my upkeep is bare minimum (bulbs for my last setup could be $300 every few months).
I also grabbed the 'dual fan kit' which allows you to just plug in normal computer case fans, and they even had a speed control. I turned it down until I could feel the heat on the heatsink. The LED's run hot enough to loosed the solder if you don't run fans (found that out the annoyingly hard way).
Darryl_V link said:[quote author=Zakk link=topic=1240.msg8892#msg8892 date=1313183239]
I'm using the led's from rapid led.
I went with a mix of white and royal blues, although it doesn't hurt to throw an extra blue in the mix. Those are 12 LEd's per 9\" hear sink (so I can direct the light better). 80 degree lenses up the par value. I then grabbed an 'actinic' pack from the site and up it onto a 12\" stip heatsink.
The setups are neat. You can buy a dimmable setup, and you could wire 12 blue to one driver and 12 white to another, then change the output of each colour until you have your perfect mix. I did 6 and 6 on each heatsink so that each sink has its own driver (easy to diagnose and replace). It's a bugger to solder everything, but all told I spent about $1K on everything, and now pretty much every bit of it can be replaced (although each LED is rated for thousnds of hours use). So after that outlay, my upkeep is bare minimum (bulbs for my last setup could be $300 every few months).
I also grabbed the 'dual fan kit' which allows you to just plug in normal computer case fans, and they even had a speed control. I turned it down until I could feel the heat on the heatsink. The LED's run hot enough to loosed the solder if you don't run fans (found that out the annoyingly hard way).
teebone110 link said:Hey Zakk, what do you say about making me a strip of Royal Blue LEDs for my 90G?
I know you want to![]()
Zakk link said:[quote author=teebone110 link=topic=1240.msg9015#msg9015 date=1313639990]
Hey Zakk, what do you say about making me a strip of Royal Blue LEDs for my 90G?
I know you want to![]()
phi delt reefer link said:for all you soldering-challenged folk;
http://www.modularled.ca/
Canadian company that sells leds mounted on circuts boards that you just plug together - no soldering required. Cost of leds is the same as buying them on 'raw' and they are Crees (for you brand whores)
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phi delt reefer link said:you have to mount those circuit boards to a heat sink as well so they should be fine.
phi delt reefer link said: