Sorry I missed that you were looking for input on everything and not just additional things you were missing. I will share with you what I got for my DIY LED, which I consider the best built I've made so far and I love it.
I will share with you all the components I used for my setup, so you can have the full list.
The reason why I went with 12V and 3 LEDs in series is to avoid having to use special drivers, resistors, etc. In my setup, I use one power supply capable of handling all the LEDs, the controller I mention below and the PCB boards for simplicity, but they PCB boards are not needed. You can do the same thing with just 3 star PCB boards wired in sequence.
First, I buy everything I use from eBay and mostly Chinese vendors and I have never had any issues with my light and I love my light and my corals are growing very well.
Please keep in mind that you always want to have more LEDs than you need and run your light at 60% to 70%. This will greatly extend the life of your LEDs, keep the heat generation down and give you much more flexibility when it comes to PAR measurements and types of corals you can keep.
Recommendations for LEDs calculation:
http://www.rapidled.com/led-university-1/
I'll start with the list of LEDs. The number of LEDs will depend on your size tank. I used this calculator on Rapid LED, but I went with almost double the LEDs.
- Cold White LEDs (Try to go with 14,000K. This gives you a very nice blueish white color)
- Blue LEDs (I would get a mixture of Royal blue and regular blue)
- Green LEDs (You only need a few of these. Don't buy 100, you don't need them.)
- UV LEDs (Also, just a few of them)
- Yellow LEDs (These are optional and so are red LEDs.)
You will also need:
- Heatsink/PCB boards for 3 x 3W LEDs (How many, will depend on your setup)
- Power Supply(I recommend going higher than you may need. You will need to calculate how much you need first. I use a 20amp one, but I only use about 3 amps at high noon.)
- LED Controller 12V 20Amps (This thing is awesome. It handles sunrise/sunset, the speed of the fan and everything in between and is super easy to program)
- Lenses(Maybe... if your tank is very deep. I don't use them, but initially got them)
- Heatsink glue (I used only 1 of these for mine, but if you plan on a larger light, you may need a few)
- Heatsink(The size and quantity depends on your setup. also get the fans)
- Wire (I like this one because it allows me to do 3 separate channels in a single cable)
These are a few pictures of my light. You will see that before I had more whites than blues and I also had everything connected with individual wires. It looked ugly so I went to Home Depot and got the 7 wires cable and changed the setup a bit.
Link
Power supply and controller.
Link
This is a link to a video I took of the sunset to sunrise function of my light. Please note that it has been accelerated X256 for the demo.
http://webmanny.com/post/107358581048/a-quick-video-of-the-automated-dimming-feature-on