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12/02/2011, 07:13 AM | #126 | |
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There are a few HP LEDs out there that I was looking at but these sound like old fashioned low power LEDs. Would be interesting to compare efficiency, and also distribution, as some of the red HPs have pretty narrow built-in optics, unfortunately.
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12/02/2011, 07:28 AM | #127 |
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I did a search on Mouser (or maybe Future), so I don't have link. If you can't find them let me know and I will try and track them down. They are older T1 3/4 gumdrop types. I thought maybe if the efficiency was close this would be cheaper and give better spread.
Apparently the Cree site is down so I am having trouble figuring efficiency but I found an Binning and labeling (Apr 08). The best Reds only produce about 40 Lumen at 350ma. Ahha from led supply 3 up star 137.1 lumen at .35amps and 6.3 volts so 62 lumens per watt (must be a better grade then the old dinning and labeling). So not much more efficient than CFL, but all the spectrum is usable by the algae.
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12/02/2011, 07:36 AM | #128 | |
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Ok so apparently Candella is light in a cone and Lumen is total light output. So there is not direct comparison, but I did find this:
Quote:
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12/02/2011, 07:54 AM | #129 |
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Here is an interesting one (a link just for DWZM)
5200 lumen at 20ma and 1.85 volts and 30 degrees so 5.200 / 4.67 (from table above) = 1.11 lumens 1.11 / (.02 * 1.85) = 30 lumen per watt So half the efficiency of the XP-Es I found above. But it is only $0.20 as opposed to $12.60 for the one from LED Supply. Sounds great but you need 137.1 / 1.11 = 123 of these so $24.70. So the moral of the story is a good 3 watt LED is still better than lots (yes I mean) lots of little ones.
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12/02/2011, 08:22 AM | #130 |
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I'm not sure how this really applies. I know that the fixtures I had made contain 120 degree LEDs 3/4" OC and they're 1W each. They are blindingly bright and I have no doubt that they will grow algae very well. I understand the candela thing as this is a measure of light when you focus the beam into a specific angle, and if you allow the light to spread across a greater angle then you get a lower candela level spread across a greater angle. This is the point though of an LED fixture for a scrubber, you want the light spread out as much as possible so that you don't burn the algae.
For most people doing DIY, 3W LEDs will probably do just fine, but those are for the DIYers, and they are taking into consideration many other factors specific to their system. They can make modifications to allow for diffusion and distance specific to their setup/space limitations. A stock fixture with an array of 1W LEDs will be more robust for those not quite so handy. Even coverage is the issue I am trying to achieve with the 1W array as I believe this is important for primary filtration and minimum screen size. the information you are posting is very interesting, I hadn't thought about any of that being a factor.
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12/02/2011, 09:37 AM | #131 |
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Actually the XP-E I mentioned above are only running at .74 watts for .35 amps so maybe 1.5 amps at 700. So in that sense they are 1 watt LED. Ah the fun of varying the current. Did you find a link to the ones you had made?
I will be replacing bio-pellets and people complain about the cost of replacing those. I have not replaced many and would hate to see the cost of electricity for the scrubber be more that the pellet replacement cost. That is why I am looking at efficiency. And because efficiency can vary so much I was trying to figure out a better rule than .5 watts per gallon. In the above cases effiency doubled does that mean .25 watts per gallon of good LEDs or 1 watt for bad LEDs. Now I think you see where I am heading.
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12/02/2011, 09:38 AM | #132 |
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Actually the XP-E I mentioned above are only running at .74 watts for .35 amps so maybe 1.5 amps at 700. So in that sense they are 1 watt LED. Ah the fun of varying the current. Did you find a link to the ones you had made?
I will be replacing bio-pellets and people complain about the cost of replacing those. I have not replaced many and would hate to see the cost of electricity for the scrubber be more that the pellet replacement cost. That is why I am looking at efficiency. And because efficiency can vary so much I was trying to figure out a better rule than .5 watts per gallon. In the above cases efficiency doubled does that mean .25 watts per gallon of good LEDs or 1 watt for bad LEDs. Now I think you see where I am heading.
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12/02/2011, 10:01 AM | #133 |
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you have to remember that the new lighting guidelines and feeding guidelines have kind of changed the rules. Originally it was 1 sq in per gallon, and 1 watt per square inch. Now it's 12 square inches or screen per cube of food (or equivalent). Also you can double the lighting to 2W/ sq in and halve the photoperiod to power through to the green algae.
From what I've seen for results from good DIY LED builds, it seems that LEDs were ahead of this game. The intensity of light in the spectrum that algae prefers without excess light in bandwidths that algae doesn't efficiently use seems to lead to green growth much more readily. So I still say that, as a rule of thumb, 1W LED per sq in of screen (dimensional, which means 0.5W /sq in on each side if you want to get picky) is what we should be shooting for. I can't recall what the wattage rating on the fixture I have it, but I believe it is in the range of 65W and I intended it to illuminate a screen that was about 8 x 15 but it may be slightly smaller, so I'm hitting this right at about 0.5 W/ sq in on each side with 2 fixtures. If you go by the old lighting method, then yes you could go 0.25W/sq in on each side, or 0.5W/sq dimensionally. Just so I'm clear if you were trying to light up a 10x10 screen, 100 sq in, 50W LED total, 25W LED on each side, which 'translates' to 100W T5HO total, 50W T5HO on each side. That is of course assuming that I am correct in being able to reduce wattage by half when going to LED vs T5HO/CFL. And this assumption mandates the use of 630/660 reds, maybe a blue or two, and NO whites, nothing else. I like where you are going with this though. Really pinning down the exact efficiency of various types/brands/bins of LEDs could help you get the 'perfect' efficiency. Though I'm sure most people would just add a couple more LEDs and call it good, but you go man! No word on the LEDs on my fixtures yet. Too busy...
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12/02/2011, 10:24 AM | #134 | |
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Quote:
I know get dimmable drivers so the algae can be acclimated.
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12/02/2011, 10:49 AM | #135 |
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I see where you're coming from. It is very good that you brought this up. What is a gumdrop though?
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12/02/2011, 10:55 AM | #136 |
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Look up 5mm or T1 3/4 LEDs. They don't need MCPCB and are usually used as indicators.
This is close. Didn't look up the exact size of that one, but you will get the idea.
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12/02/2011, 11:02 AM | #137 |
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OK, that's what I thought they were. I would never recommend those anyways, only HP LEDs on stars or PCBs.
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12/02/2011, 11:08 AM | #138 |
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I thought they might be cheaper. I had just never done the math to figure out how many it would take. Many more than I thought (should have believed kcress). I still wonder how much variation there is in HP leds.
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12/02/2011, 01:26 PM | #139 |
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I am restarting my scrubber project and was looking at Home Depot and they sell 2700 k Bulbs with LED's has anyone thought of using these? In my mind if the same kelvin works for CFL and T5 why not the LED bulbs? Mine won't be up and running until after new years but I have a 12x12 red and blue Ebay grow panel laying around I will use on one side and debating a LED bulb on the other.
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12/02/2011, 01:45 PM | #140 |
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$5 says that panel is the 'gumdrop' type LED that TFM and I just discussed. It has been tried, not intense enough. The home depot LED lamps are not grow lamps. CFL 2700k and LED 2700k are not the same. a CFL uses different combinations of phosphors on the inside of the lamp to achieve a certain color temp, so you can have 2 lamps with different spectral graphs and they will both be 2700K. LEDs are not that way, so they are not comparable. For scrubbers with LED you need something that is specifically a grow lamp. All red and maybe a few blues. It will not look like any lamp that you would put in your home. For instance, this is what the light I had made looks like when shining on my blinds in our house
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12/03/2011, 08:54 AM | #141 | |
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you may notice people who use T5 after 6 month change their lamps because the quality reduced and with bad quality you will see turfs and we exactly want a bad light! I have yellow LED on my tank(just one spot) and i have lots of algae on that place. take a look at my tank and my ATS : 64Gallon tank with 42 leds(3W half blue half white) this is FPL florescent that i use for my ATS (2800 lumen is for yellow color and 2600 for white) and here come the result: and ATS base And ATS with 36W yellow FPL at the top of the sump ps. sorry for my bad writing. English is not my first language Last edited by Rafi; 12/03/2011 at 09:03 AM. |
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12/03/2011, 10:34 AM | #142 |
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Rafi, your pictures aren't showing up. I can tell you that you are definitely wrong on the use of yellow or blue/white for growing algae on a scrubber with maximum efficiency. I'm not saying that you won't grow algae, because just about any light source will grow *some* algae. But the results of literally hundreds of scrubber builds working on tanks throughout the world has revealed that the *best* light spectrum for algae growth is heavy in red, with maybe some blue.
This chart explains it The yellow spectrum is right in the middle at the lowest point. Chlorophyll A and B do not use this efficiently. You cannot rely on this color temperature for effective filtration. If you're talking about how the lights "look" to the human eye, that's immaterial. The CFLs that are recommended for scrubbers are the "warm white" (generally, 2700-3000K specifically) which are heavy in red spectrum and produce the best growth. Like I said, your scrubber may grow algae just fine and might keep your N and P down to manageable levels in the system that you run, but if there is a mitigation circumstance, such as a fish dying that you can't get to, or if a kid dumps a bunch of food in the tank, or something else our of the ordinary, it may not be able to handle the issue because the scrubber is not efficient or effective enough. Properly built scrubbers are capable of handling such situations and can be a huge safety net for a very expensive system.
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12/06/2011, 10:12 AM | #143 |
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I would be interested to hear from people who are using a format other than the standard "hang a sheet of mesh from a slotted pipe." I understand why this is the most popular approach and that it's easy to build and get results from, but I'm wondering if it's best for me in the long term.
I am most interested in configurations that: 1) Are cheap 2) Are more compact/self contained (this is my biggest complaint with the common vertical screen, by the time you've put lamps with good reflectors and splash guards on it, it's HUGE and awkward.)
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12/06/2011, 10:24 AM | #144 |
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It wont be huge and awkward for long, im working on a design i plan on starting in Jan and have a couple beta testers lined up.
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12/06/2011, 01:19 PM | #145 |
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I get what you are saying about the led vs cfl. I figured as much but did not want to admit it to myself. My led panel is a grow light panel off Ebay so it is heavy in the red and some blues. It has a 12x12 screen for a 40B so I am hoping to experiment with different lights and designs to get the best use of space and scrubbing.
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12/06/2011, 03:09 PM | #146 |
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The chart makes it clear why you'd want 660nm red LEDs and makes it pretty clear that typical cool/neutral/warm white LEDs are all bad choices.
But why aren't we throwing RBs or violets on the rigs in much higher ratios, given the huge spikes around 420 and 450 nm?
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12/06/2011, 03:13 PM | #147 |
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And why 630 while we are at it?
TIA
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12/06/2011, 06:12 PM | #148 |
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because the hort guy I have been working with said that 630s flat out beat 660s for plant growth watt for watt due to intensity. It is not known whether this translate to algae. hence my ever-pending experiment
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12/06/2011, 10:43 PM | #149 |
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This is all good stuff! I can't wait to see what you guys come up with as definite answers! Some of this is a bit over my head, but it looks like once it's all dialed in we will have a definite answer on which exact led configuration may work the best! It's too bad the led retrofit bulbs can't work, would definitely make it easy for everyone to just swap out their current cfls.
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12/07/2011, 02:59 AM | #150 | |
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Quote:
http://ledwholesalers.com/store/inde...&productId=398 Might be a little too small I am guessing.
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