[PSUBS-MAILIST] LED lights
Rick Patton via Personal_Submersibles
personal_submersibles at psubs.org
Fri Feb 2 12:35:09 EST 2018
Hi Alan,
Did you buy just a 7,000lm array and put them in a housing or did they
already come in a housing and you filled them like Hank did? Not sure what
a driver is either?? Is it a PWM that acts like a driver and a dimmer as
well? Do you have any pictures on your projects and photos page of this I
can look at and could you send me the particulars offline on where you
bought the drivers and arrays? and Cliff, please send me what you have as
well.
Mahalo!
satwelder at gmail.com
Thanks
Rick
On Thu, Feb 1, 2018 at 12:31 PM, Alan via Personal_Submersibles <
personal_submersibles at psubs.org> wrote:
> Rick,
> I have built my led 7000lm 36V lights & are going to use 2 out front.
> I have used them on a boat & in the bush & don't consider them an
> overkill. I think with the clear water in Hawaii you would want more
> lumens as there will be a further distance that you can see night diving.
> I have dimmers on mine for low visibility diving, as the back scatter from
> the muck in the water will be blinding.
> Led's need a driver to give them constant current & of lesser importance
> constant voltage. They are reasonably voltage tolerant as long as the
> current
> is controlled. I mistakenly had a 36V led running off 80V.
> You can build your own but for me it was a lot of mucking about designing,
> sourcing lenses from China etc. I had my led driver designed & made
> specifically for me by a Chinese firm. I am not happy with aspects of the
> design as there is a certain part that needs heat sinking & default mode
> is on if the wiring comes apart. So will be re-ordering an updated driver
> some time in the future.
> You can find suitable buck boost drivers on ebay as Alec did, but not with
> dimming.
> They don't get too hot if you run them in water & heat sink them to a base.
> The easiest idea, as Hank says is to find a suitable off the shelf light
> that
> you can oil compensate. The drivers however have electrolytic capacitors
> that are vulnerable to pressure, so if the driver is in the light unit it
> could
> fail under pressure if compensated.
> I have subjected an led on it's own to 2000psi & it survived.
> Most of the high power leds are around 36V.
> Let me know if I can help.
> Emile sells an led light!
> Cheers Alan
>
>
>
> Sent from my iPad
>
> On 2/02/2018, at 10:33 AM, hank pronk via Personal_Submersibles <
> personal_submersibles at psubs.org> wrote:
>
> Rick,
> You can keep it real simple and just buy water proof lights (LED) and oil
> fill them. Just inspect the light to make sure you can drill and put a
> filler plug in. I have great luck with a 24,000 lumen light bar. I am
> actually buying a clear acrylic cylinder to put my light into. Alec has
> had luck with this also, maybe he can suggest the particular light to use.
> Hank
>
> On Thursday, February 1, 2018, 2:06:41 PM MST, Rick Patton via
> Personal_Submersibles <personal_submersibles at psubs.org> wrote:
>
>
> I have been experimenting with my LED exterior lights which is a field I
> know nothing about which makes it even that much more frustrating and
> wanted to get feedback from those who have had success so far using them.
>
> I was planning on using incandescent lights but everyone I talk to say
> that LED is the only way to go. I guess my reasoning for staying with
> incandescent was that it was a no brainier for me but I liked what I heard
> about LED. I initially figured that if 10 lumans is good 10,000 is much
> better but I am finding out that once you get up to that high a luman, a
> lot of things kick in that you have to deal with!
>
> I also am thinking that I can probably get away with a heck of a lot less
> lumans due to the visibility that we have here in Hawaii so maybe all I
> need are 5,000 luman lights which put out a lot less heat and don't have to
> deal with some of the issues that a 10,000 luman light would.
>
> All input appreciated!
> In the dark in Hawaii! not to mention fake missile alerts!!
>
> Rick
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