SkiFletch
New member
Been using LED's for almost 2 years now and God bless them for the comparable light level without all the heat of Halides. It makes my tank sooo much safer from June through August and that piece of mind is worth it just by itself. Of course the cost savings in air conditioning on the 2nd floor in the summer is equally awesome.
Anyways, my old setup is 72 luxeon rebels with a mix of 60 and 40 degree optics. Heatsink is a bank of garbge picked SCR heatsinks that are massive enough to do the job passively (no fan required). Drivers are older CAT 4101 home made. The PAR that fixture put out was similar to dual 175watt halides, just a little bit more. Got PAR readings of around 100 at the sandbed and closer to 350 near the top (though it gets pretty variable higher up). I was happy with the performance but wanted both a little more oomph, a more efficient controller, and a better option for PWM in the future. So I decided to overhaul the fixture, switch to Cree LED's (XP-G and XP-E white and blue), and LM3409 based drivers. I'm all set with parts, etc. Prototyped a driver, works like a charm, so I'm proceeding with the overhaul.
In taking apart the old fixture though I get to my questions and concerns. I'm a Wrasse fan, thus I need a full hood and have the fixture embedded in the hood. The seawater environment was NOT kind to the old Rebels after 2 years. All sorts of pitting and corrosion on them and the LED's themselves had seawater on top of the lens. How some of these things still bang out light, I don't know, but they all still work despite looking like they've been through a war. As a result, I want to try and seawater proof this next batch a bit. Anybody have any bright ideas? I don't really want to try and put a splash guard because they're a PITA to keep clean and I think the problem is more condensation than splash. Not to mention building such a splash guard would be tricky. I am planning on re-using the optics so I was debating siliconing or epoxying the gaps in the sides of the optics to keep the lenses from seeing moisture. I was also thinking about using a spray-on conformal coating for the stars themselves again to prevent condensation. A few layers should seal out the water and still allow me to remove them eventually. I want to avoid GOBBING silicone all over the boards and the mounting hardware so that I can't take them off.
Anyways, I've gabbed enough. What do you guys do to prevent condensation and seawater issues in your LED fixtures? Would love to hear some input.
Anyways, my old setup is 72 luxeon rebels with a mix of 60 and 40 degree optics. Heatsink is a bank of garbge picked SCR heatsinks that are massive enough to do the job passively (no fan required). Drivers are older CAT 4101 home made. The PAR that fixture put out was similar to dual 175watt halides, just a little bit more. Got PAR readings of around 100 at the sandbed and closer to 350 near the top (though it gets pretty variable higher up). I was happy with the performance but wanted both a little more oomph, a more efficient controller, and a better option for PWM in the future. So I decided to overhaul the fixture, switch to Cree LED's (XP-G and XP-E white and blue), and LM3409 based drivers. I'm all set with parts, etc. Prototyped a driver, works like a charm, so I'm proceeding with the overhaul.
In taking apart the old fixture though I get to my questions and concerns. I'm a Wrasse fan, thus I need a full hood and have the fixture embedded in the hood. The seawater environment was NOT kind to the old Rebels after 2 years. All sorts of pitting and corrosion on them and the LED's themselves had seawater on top of the lens. How some of these things still bang out light, I don't know, but they all still work despite looking like they've been through a war. As a result, I want to try and seawater proof this next batch a bit. Anybody have any bright ideas? I don't really want to try and put a splash guard because they're a PITA to keep clean and I think the problem is more condensation than splash. Not to mention building such a splash guard would be tricky. I am planning on re-using the optics so I was debating siliconing or epoxying the gaps in the sides of the optics to keep the lenses from seeing moisture. I was also thinking about using a spray-on conformal coating for the stars themselves again to prevent condensation. A few layers should seal out the water and still allow me to remove them eventually. I want to avoid GOBBING silicone all over the boards and the mounting hardware so that I can't take them off.
Anyways, I've gabbed enough. What do you guys do to prevent condensation and seawater issues in your LED fixtures? Would love to hear some input.