• I am planning LED lighting and need help.

  • Yolanda

I plan to assemble an LED light for a cube measuring 70 by 70 by 70 cm. The dimensions of the light will be 60 by 40 cm. The total number of diodes is 135. Can you suggest if I should change something, reduce, add, or rearrange anything? 10000K - 45 pcs 6500K - 15 pcs Royal - 24 pcs Blue - 14 pcs UV of several spectrums - 15 pcs Red - 12 pcs Green - 10 pcs The diagram for clarity is not great, so please don't throw tomatoes.

Debra6575

Will there be lenses or a frosted diffusing screen for the LEDs? Is there some hidden meaning in the fact that the yellow, green, and red LEDs are not evenly distributed? It seems to me that there are too many red ones, but that's a matter of perception and taste. Just in case, personal experience, 2 years. Cree LEDs last a month in salty moisture, and as a result, all of them died within a year. I switched to Edison. I tried to understand the problem; Cree does not guarantee operation, and the crystals need to be protected from moisture, especially from salty moisture.

Joseph1346

a little, from my experience I can say white and especially green red green a huge overkill then you will use it at 3%. I have Cree - quite satisfied - flight is normal no signs of dying here is my lamp so I use white at a maximum of 30% that is, I could have saved money and taken half as many whites right away.

David

Replace the greens with cyans, and take the ratio of the diodes from a good branded fixture and scale it to your needs; this will reduce the chances of making a mistake.

Darrell5975

Use the following ratio: 1 white (10k and 6500 alternately), 2 royal blue, 1 blue, 1 cyan, 1 UV. For the entire assembly, you need a total of 2 red, 2 orange, and 2 green. Count no more than 0.8 liters of watt... Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

Courtney

Have you tried installing protective glass? Cree has been fine for over 2 years...