my beautiful array, note the use of a 1.5A fuse to protect from being dropped in the tank. I also have a capacitor on the power supply to help clean up the output voltage. I used 91.5ohm resistors in series w/ each 10LED strand. Each LED drops about 3.4Vdc and the resistor may vary between 2.2V and 2.5V depending on the temp of the LEDs giving 24-27mA, LEDs are rated for 20mA and 30mA max. I did not drill all of those holes, I ordered a sheet of perforated polycarbonate from usplastics.com. I did have to quickly widen all 400 holes of the 4.7mm holes w/ a 5mm drill bit. It really only took 20 minutes to redrill, it cuts like butter. I spent alltogether maybe 10 hours soldering/drilling/trimming/bending the LEDs and maybe 2 hours mounting them and making final connections/cleanup.
The array is secured w/ hexbolt standoffs and then is hot-glued onto them (couldnt twist the lugs/design error due to big fingers) cooled by 2 x 5Vdc fans, protective acrylic 1/16"sheet to shield LEDs from salt creep.
30 UV LEDs, these stay on after the power switch is flipped. The 36Vdc supply is made by running a 12Vdc supply in series w/ a 24Vdc supply. These lights are always on, but stay on after the main Lights go off. The 12Vdc is going throughout the entire array at nite but can not lite the LEDs at such a low voltage, but the UV's positive terminals are tapping the positive leg of the 12Vdc supply to keep them running at the correct voltage. This allows me to run my moon lights using only one 12Vdc supply instead of TWO!
before 13WPC, I like the colors better before... The LEDs seem to "wash out" colors... you decide.
after, 350 white/blue LEDs, 40,000mcd whites @26mA ea.
looks brighter to me,
LUX reading to be delivered this week late,
GSP is the only coral I got (for now), and it is opening.
cliche quote "this moon lite pic does not do it justice!"
30 - 410nm UV LEDs @ 21mA
My intended goal: Simulate 150W MH light
- create lights that outlast the tank (these are supposed to last 50,000 hours until they reach 50% intensity, IE 13 tank years at 10hour days)
- create low heat lighting to avoid cooling costs/issues (they run about as hot as a 7W PC, warm... but they wont burn you, they do require fans to keep the current from getting too high)
- save power (these LEDs consume 42watts... 72% less power then a 150W MH)
- do it cheaper or equal (150W MH retail would be around $200 for a DIY kit, these cost me about $150-$200 minus tools)
- be equal to or as powerful as 150W MH (not sure, LUX metere is on the way!)
- prove that LEDs can grow coral (the spectrum should be there... I'll keep a log of my findings/growth starting with SOFT CORALS, then SPS/clam)
NEXT on the list...
convert my fuge light into pure blue/red/uv LEDs, maybe a touch of white to balance out the purple glow. I already have the LEDs. Will wire w/in the next 7 days.