Cabinet lighting?

dopechess

Well-Known Member
Hey,

Those are 17watts each. 3-4 will not work for your grow area. You'll probably need like 20 of those to make it work.

I am assume it's 2ft x 3ft x 5ft tall? Depending on your budget, you could build a DIY COB LED array for about 300 that would kick ass compared to one's you can buy. Here's a link to one of the diy http://rollitup.org/t/diy-led-grow-lights-with-cree-cxa3070-cobs-and-cpu-coolers.805681/

I went with cheap chinese panel and added some extra CFL to supplement. If i had to do it over again, i would have built a DIY COB.

dopechess
 

H J Farnsworth

Active Member
Ok... Damn I'm sold on the DIY idea but I'm gonna have that be an early winter project. I guess I'll just have to be patient and do it right. I have no soldering experience but this and a few other issues at hand make me more determined to learn. Thanks everybody.
 

H J Farnsworth

Active Member
For the meantime, while I become a light building master does anybody think this would be a bad light? Might be a bit pricey and it's only veg but couldn't I supplement it with some red light?
 

soc.op13

New Member
Farns
Im not sure whether that 17W LED would give you enough output, and for the price you could probably get more watts/money elsewhere. The LED DIY project would be a fun experience (especially if you don't solder much) but again is a larger investment on something that you don't have a "guarantee" it works. If you get an HPS bulb and ballast combo that doesn't light up, the company will likely just replace them for you, but with a DIY project there is so much potential for user-side error introduced that you'll now have to troubleshoot, identify the faulty component, and possibly order a replacement part.

Personally, I have my BA in Elec. Engineering so I try to go as DIY as possible - fans, lights, carbon filter. I usually start from whatever old power adapter I can find and prototype a board to give me whatever function I'd like.( old laptop adapters or old console power blocks usually provide sufficient voltage at a high current ). It is really fun, but takes up more time than you would think - I can definitely see the up side to a "plug and grow" system if you really don't care much for getting your hands dirty, or if you don't have extra time and just want to grow.
 

H J Farnsworth

Active Member
Farns
Im not sure whether that 17W LED would give you enough output, and for the price you could probably get more watts/money elsewhere. The LED DIY project would be a fun experience (especially if you don't solder much) but again is a larger investment on something that you don't have a "guarantee" it works. If you get an HPS bulb and ballast combo that doesn't light up, the company will likely just replace them for you, but with a DIY project there is so much potential for user-side error introduced that you'll now have to troubleshoot, identify the faulty component, and possibly order a replacement part.

Personally, I have my BA in Elec. Engineering so I try to go as DIY as possible - fans, lights, carbon filter. I usually start from whatever old power adapter I can find and prototype a board to give me whatever function I'd like.( old laptop adapters or old console power blocks usually provide sufficient voltage at a high current ). It is really fun, but takes up more time than you would think - I can definitely see the up side to a "plug and grow" system if you really don't care much for getting your hands dirty, or if you don't have extra time and just want to grow.
Yeah after doing some reading the 17w bulbs don't seem to hold up but I want to start growing ASAP but I also love learning so a DIY project while my first grow is going would be nice.
 

grouch

Well-Known Member
Just pick up a cheap 150-250w hps and start building supplemental cob lights a little at a time. Eventually you will be able to throw the hps in the trash and have high efficiency lighting!
 

whitebb2727

Well-Known Member
It's not a new idea. I know someone was trying to market those types of skylights (not with literal fiber optics, though).
The idea is to just "pipe" sunlight where you need it.

Oh what do you know... they're from around Vancouver. :mrgreen:


There is a guy working on it with fiber optics. I'll see if I can dig it up.
 
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