Aveoguy22
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i have a fixture like this. mine came with a "blast shield" to catch fragments that snaps onto the bottom of the bucket. it has small holes to allow for air circulation but is there to catch a lamp explosion should it occur. you can look in my gallery and find it if you want. in the pics i have posted now it is not installed but now that i have it in operation i have the cover installed. ill have to get a picture sometime soon
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« Last Edit: August 12, 2016, 02:02:35 PM by Aveoguy22 »
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Ash
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Filters get clogged, fans wear mechanically. And the whole point of dragging around the "bucket" design is to keep things incredibly cheap, so all the advanced cooling options miss the point
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AngryHorse
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Rich, Coaster junkie!
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Well also, forced air cooling STILL requires the lantern to be `open` at the top and bottom so air can flow in the first place.
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« Last Edit: August 12, 2016, 05:11:13 PM by AngryHorse »
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Current: UK 230V, 50Hz Power provider: e.on energy Street lighting in our town: Philips UniStreet LED (gen 1) Longest serving LED in service at home, (hour count): Energetic mini clear globe: 57,746 hrs @ 15/12/24
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wattMaster
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Filters get clogged, fans wear mechanically. And the whole point of dragging around the "bucket" design is to keep things incredibly cheap, so all the advanced cooling options miss the point
This would be for fancy LED streetlights, maybe. Radiators can provide a lot of cooling, and because you just need to connect pipes to the LEDs, you can make a lot more designs. And radiators are reliable and relatively easy to clean. You could also make a variable speed driver for the radiator fan.
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SLS! (Stop LED Streetlights!)
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Aveoguy22
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Filters get clogged, fans wear mechanically. And the whole point of dragging around the "bucket" design is to keep things incredibly cheap, so all the advanced cooling options miss the point
This would be for fancy LED streetlights, maybe. Radiators can provide a lot of cooling, and because you just need to connect pipes to the LEDs, you can make a lot more designs. And radiators are reliable and relatively easy to clean. You could also make a variable speed driver for the radiator fan.
i believe the fan idea has been tried for some LED recessed can lights. i cant remember who on here had pictures of them but there was a small fan to draw air over the heatsink and discharge it into the area above the drop ceiling.
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wattMaster
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Filters get clogged, fans wear mechanically. And the whole point of dragging around the "bucket" design is to keep things incredibly cheap, so all the advanced cooling options miss the point
This would be for fancy LED streetlights, maybe. Radiators can provide a lot of cooling, and because you just need to connect pipes to the LEDs, you can make a lot more designs. And radiators are reliable and relatively easy to clean. You could also make a variable speed driver for the radiator fan.
i believe the fan idea has been tried for some LED recessed can lights. i cant remember who on here had pictures of them but there was a small fan to draw air over the heatsink and discharge it into the area above the drop ceiling.
I had an idea just like that, but I gave up on it because every attic/space-above-the-ceiling in Florida is crazy hot and humid.
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SLS! (Stop LED Streetlights!)
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Aveoguy22
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Filters get clogged, fans wear mechanically. And the whole point of dragging around the "bucket" design is to keep things incredibly cheap, so all the advanced cooling options miss the point
This would be for fancy LED streetlights, maybe. Radiators can provide a lot of cooling, and because you just need to connect pipes to the LEDs, you can make a lot more designs. And radiators are reliable and relatively easy to clean. You could also make a variable speed driver for the radiator fan.
i believe the fan idea has been tried for some LED recessed can lights. i cant remember who on here had pictures of them but there was a small fan to draw air over the heatsink and discharge it into the area above the drop ceiling.
I had an idea just like that, but I gave up on it because every attic/space-above-the-ceiling in Florida is crazy hot and humid.
it seems to me that it would be a bad idea because the fans were just your normal brushless DC fans. they would wear out far short of the "expected" lifespan of the fixture. unless they had a control unit with a microcontroller watching the temp constantly and only turning it on when needed. just 1 more part to quit on you. the radiator idea might seem like a good idea at first but when you figure in all the plumbing, pump, radiator and the circuit to controll all this it seems pointless and that you might better go with CFL or normal LED fittings. then there would be repair/ maintenance of the system and the cost to run it and fix etc.
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Ash
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Attic spaces hot and humid. And dirty, which applies to everywhere in the world. The fans and heatsinks will get clogged before anything else fails It was me with the pic of the cans : http://www.lighting-gallery.net/gallery/displayimage.php?album=2438&pos=14&pid=75662
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wattMaster
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A radiator would be ideal for stadium lights, where you could need a lot of cooling.
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SLS! (Stop LED Streetlights!)
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