-40%
Sun Board 96 diode 6500k Samsung lm301b 85w grow light Quantum veg Strip
$ 11.08
- Description
- Size Guide
Description
Hello, this listing is for the best LED grow light on the market today!! The lm301b has an amazing color spectrum, and one of the highest ppe available for any LED! These lights are very good at growing some of the most amazing plants ever seen by any LED. If you want the best this is it! Please see my other listings for black anodized heatsinks that were designed specifically for these strips. You can find them here:https://www.ebay.com/itm/174333133801
Best offer of 19.99 automatically accepted. This listing is for a single 6500k lm301b quantum strip and will be shipped out to you after purchase by end of day!! 5 Year warranty!!! Please save my information and contact me if there is ever a problem with your strip. For the price/diode, these strips have some of the best leds on the market right now! These sun boards use the same diodes as the very popular quantum boards v2, however these strips will cost you much less!!
This listing is for a single 6500k, CRI 80, 85w 96-diode with lm301b diodes STRIPS ONLY (no driver included) They are rated at 24v and get 3 amps max. I was able to push them to 3.5 amps at 24 volts, but they get pretty hot at that voltage and need heat dissipation. Please see my other listings for heatsinks that were made specifically for these strips here:
https://www.ebay.com/itm/174333133801
(Dimensions: 1.2" x 15.8" x 0.2") these get up to 210 lumens per watt! The 2700k diodes are for flowering plants. LM301B 6500k LED diodes have a bunch of Blue and even a good amount of UV that will give plants exactly what they crave, and I'm not talking about electrolytes, I'm talking about light that will give higher Veg growth as well as trichome production.
WHEN IT COMES TO GROW LIGHTS,
THE BEST VALUE IS DIY STRIPS
Please scroll down more to get various methods to setup these lights.
You will need the best coverage possible, which you can do with strips since you can design your layout to be any shape or size, even for side lighting. It is recommended to have about 32watts of LEDs per square foot.
The more leds you have on your light fixture spread out, the deeper the penetration there will be through the canopy
These DIY strips add versatility since you are able to modify as needed and you will be able to troubleshoot everything since you are creating everything.
THESE ARE IN MY OPINION THE BEST 30MM X 400MM 96 LED STRIPS AVAILABLE AS THEY ARE THE NEWEST SAMSUNG LM301H DIODES
Each Strip Has the Following:
96x Samsung lm301b 6500k LEDs
These are 400mmx30mm (16 in x 1.2 in) 96 diode LED Strips. It is possible for me to apply double sided thermal tape to the strip where you would just have to rip the paper off and stick it to the heatsink or cookie sheet. It is very sticky and will also replace the need for thermal paste.
There are connectors on both ends of the board, which makes it simpler to wire in series.
For the dimensions, quantity of diodes, efficiency, flexibility, and power competency, you will probably not be able to find a better deal than these strips. 2700k is for budding and bloom. 4000k is a great spectrum for bloom/veg or all around. 6500k is best for veg. Having a mix like this makes it great for veg to bloom that offers the best all around full spectrum which is what plants crave! Strips are 24V and will use between up to 3500mA max and are most efficient at around 1400mA. The best drivers are the Meanwell HLG Drivers that have 1400mA ratings and are most efficient at this power. To wire 3 strips in series you can use the Meanwell HLG-120H-C1400B. To wire 9 strips in series you can use the HLG-320H-C1400B. Both of these drivers have options to dim also. You can also go with the HLG-240H-C1750B to run 6 strips in series. If you need any help please do not hesitate to message, I will get back to you within a day and usually the same day.
Please go to my other
listings for other types of strips that have various spectrums, mixed sets, and red booster boards. I will always provide DISCREET SHIPPING and since this is a private listing, your purchase will always remain anonymous on eBay.
This listing is for a single strip ONLY. There are no drivers included, but please just message me and we will determine the best driver for your configuration.
There are many types of configurations you could do with these strips. When I created my light fixtures I used the following procedure and materials:
What you will need to complete this project is first determining a proper driver (you need to drive these strips between 19v and 24v and the higher voltage you give them the more amperage they use. So if you were to run 3 strips in parallel at 19v it will be around 1 amp and at 24v the 3 strips will use about 9 amps. Meanwell drivers are great if you are only powering one fixture. So 3 of these strips would need 216w max so a meanwell hlg-240-24a would do the trick to hit close to max if wiring in parallel. A budget driver would be the meanwell LRS-200-24. Another good budget driver is the Meanwell LRS-350-24 as it can run 4 strips at max or 5 strips at about 93% max.
If you are advanced at electronics and want to save some money on a driver, you can use an xbox 360 power supply and boost converter like the image shown below, which will provide up to 203w of power. Please note that this is an advanced technique and you should message me for better instructions before attempting this.
If you plan on powering many lights, a good driver would be the chargery s1200 because it lets you have complete control over how much power you want to put on all your lights at the same time.. The chargery s1200 is great for wiring all your lights in parallel, and it gets up to 50amps/1200w at up to 24v, which will be able to fully power up to 16 strips at the same time,
or even 32 strips at 50%max.
you will also need some sort of fixture/ structure to attach the lights to, i use half sheet aluminum cookie sheets (18"x13") you can also use heatsinks that I have for sale in my other items for sale. You can find them here:
https://www.ebay.com/itm/174333133801
You will need to create something to hang the fixture with, I drilled holes in the 4 corners of the sheets and used rope and tied a knot through the holes, and attached some grow light ratchet hangers to the rope to allow for easy raising and lowering of the lights.. Please note that I have some black anodized heatsinks for sell in my other items for sale. These heatsinks will fit perfectly with these strips.
thick wire for power supply to light fixture (12gauge should work great, I use 10 gauge even though it is overkill), if you use the meanwell driver you won't need this because it will be provided by the driver.
thinner wire for the strips(18 gauge solid core works best, I used stranded wire and had a heck of a time getting it to attach to the terminals, but I did eventually get it), the biggest wire that will fit in the strips is 18awg. Pushing the pins on the strip with a small flat head screwdriver allows you to fasten the wire to the strip. If for some reason the onboard connectors give you issues, you can just solder wires directly to the board. I've also talked to others that used hot glue to fasten the wires in. DIY is awesome and should be something everyone should attempt if they are into saving money and know how to troubleshoot!
I highly recommend getting some good wire strippers like:
wire connectors (I prefer the screw style wire connectors but you can use solder and shrink tube also, anytime you can use shrink tube that looks the most professional but is more permanent than the screw connectors). I really like the
WireGard Screw-On Wire Connector Assortment,
you can find this at a hardware store or even here on ebay. The big blue wire connectors are great for connecting your main driver wires to the smaller wires that go to each strip.
thermal tape. Anything higher than 1.5 w/mk will be great. You want thermal tape that has 30mm width. Please note these double sided tapes are very sticky and it will be very difficult to remove the strips once you apply them to an aluminum or copper surface. I love thermal tape as it makes it much less messy than thermal paste, and it acts as a binder for the strips to the cookie sheets.
You can add some c-channel aluminum to the back of the cookie sheet as well as some cpu fans that will need to be wired in pairs in series so you can just use the same power as the lights. So take two 12v fans, wire them in series, and connect those "series pairs" to other fans that have been turned into series pairs to the driver in parallel so that they will not need a different power supply. Please message me if you need help with anything. The image shown below has only 5 fans, so I will need to add an additional fan to this setup in order to create 3 series pairs that can be run off of the 22v-24v power supply. Depending on how hard you run the strips, this may be overkill, but if you are running the strips close to max, then this will be your best option for heat dissipation to keep the strips cool, which will make the strips last much longer. Another option is to just find some 24v fans, but these are a bit harder to come by than the standard 12v fans.
Here is another configuration using heatsinks attached to the back of the cookie sheet. (for this setup I used an independent 12v driver to run all the fans, but that is more work and wasn't necessary since I could have wired fans in series pairs and then ran everything off the driver itself)
Honestly I just use 18x13 aluminum cookie sheets. They cost at walmart and you can buy them in bulk for about each if you buy like 10 of them at the same time on webstaurantstore. They will absorb almost 150 watts worth of heat so 2 strips run close to max shouldn't have any heat issues. If you want to put more strips on each tray then you may need to add some heat dissipation to the back of the trays if max lumens are desired. I use 5 quantum strips per tray plus two heatsinks attached to the back of the tray with 4x60mm fans and 1x giant 120mm fan. However the fans may be overkill and heatsinks may only be needed for this type of setup since I will personally only be running the lights at 30-40%. (the following picture has lm561c boards but the setup for lm301b will be the exact same)
Each pair of 10 gauge wires can power up to 15 strips. The 12 gauge wires can power about 12 strips at max. I wire 5x 18 gauge wires to each of the main lines using a big screw on wire connector. And those 5 wires will all go on the terminals of the strips. The big 10 or 12 gauge wires will be connected to the black and red terminals (or wires) that come out of the driver's output.
I know my instructions are not the easiest to follow. please contact me anytime for advice or directions and I will usually answer by or before the next day. I trust meanwell as the best driver for a small grow light setup. Meanwell HLG-xxxH-24A will suit your needs in this. to determine what the xxx should be, take the amount of strips that you wish to use and multiply that number by 85 --> the xxx will need to be close to that number. so for example if I use 3 strips, 3 x 85 = 255, meaning the Meanwell HLG-
240
H-24A will be perfect. The "A" means there is an onboard dimmer on the driver so a potentiometer isn't required to be connected to the driver.
Free shipping, selling only to lower 48 states. PayPal only. Returns for 30 days after the item gets to you. I have close to 100% feedback, please don't hesitate to ask any questions.
This listing is for 1 STRIP ONLY, Here is an example of an lm561c strip finished tray with 5 strips (lm301b/lm301h strips have the same dimensions so will work the exact same way):
This listing is for 1 STRIP ONLY