DIY LED Growlights from LED Xmas bulb strings
5
comments
|
Add Comment
|
I'm an electrical engineer experienced with lighting and high-brightness LED applications.
For good results, specific wavelengths of light are needed, using high-brightness LEDs drawing 1 watt or more, with proper heat-sinks.
This is a good reference:
US Patent 6921182
http://www.google.com/patents?id=jhAUAAAAEBAJ&zoom=4&pg=PA1#v=onepage&q&f=false
The biggest advantages of LED grow lights are that they will reduce by several fold the electric power consumption, and reduce the waste heat produced. The size will be similar to a CFL setup. The biggest disadvantage is that it will cost at least 5 times more money for the lamp, and this is only if you build it yourself (free labor) with a good set of free plans, and a preassembled parts kit.
I have a nearly completed design that I'd like to make available.
I could probably make a parts kits available on ebay for about $80. Or I could just provide the circuit board for $5 plus shipping. This design would put out nearly 8 watts of radiant light, and use about 26 watts of electrical power. I estimate it would roughly compare to a 54 watt CFL. This is a much bigger investment than an equivalent florescent lamp costing only $10 or $20. However, the savings in electricity would pay for the LED lamp in just 2 or 3 years, depending on your electric rate and how many hours/day the lamp is on. The higher these are, the faster it will pay for itself.
Do you think I should make an 'ible on this project?
Would anybody be interested in building one of these?
i've tried messin around with small numbers of LED's for growing stuff:
*blatant plug of own instructable* ;)
http://www.instructables.com/id/Growing-Plants-With-LED-Lights/
i'm hopefully gonna give it a go with some 3W LED's somtime soon.
![]() |














Vancouver Mini Maker Faire 2012
Rebuilding NordicTrack ski machine drive rollers
Looking for New Zealand-based Instructables authors for conference on August 27 in Wellington
Call to makers - Brighton Mini Maker Faire
Milk Crates - not as green as you think
TEDxBaghdad - Iraq - violence, dust storms and open sourced manufacturing
UK Mini Maker Faire - The Derby Silk Mill - New Poster to Share!







