ahhhavalanche!
Member
Entomology:
The Magma Chamber [mag-muh cheym-ber] -noun: (1) a large underground pool of molten rock found beneath the surface of the Earth. (2) My cab with its molten red LED glow, in which the fuel for my Volcano grows fiery.Im an unemployed engineer and have spent the past year (more?) thinking about my next grow space. My living arrangements prevented me from constructing, but silver lining, gave me a superfluous amount of time to plan, revise, and perfect my cabinet. EVERY component was scrutinized and redesigned several times. I present it below, and welcome your comments.
Structure:
Modified 2 door cabinet found on craigslist for $40. Bonuses: previous owner made Cedar back which is much stronger than the original cardboard, adds significant structural support, and smells nice; OEM lock on the door; already flat white (except for the cedar, which was covered with white duct tape). Moving seams are light proofed with bicycle tires and super glue, static seams are light proofed with aluminum tape.insert: Left original design, right modified design
Lighting:
Veg: 6 T5HO 24” 24W (2x 6500K 2x5000K 2x3000K (I wanted 4x 48” ones, but they did not fit in the space, would have been able to pull it off with some angles, but decided against it for effort and cleanliness. Then downsized to the 36” but they are a less standard size and are hard to find and thus more expensive. I am glad it worked out like this because I think the 24” are the best option anyway, providing great distribution and operating on 1 ballast). Flowering: 27 630nm + 43 660nm LEDs (lost a few during instillation and troubleshooting, started with 28 and 48 respectively) mounted to individual heat sinks (sourced from broken Xboxs, (thank you RROD, hopefully what was inadequate for your cooling purposes will be sufficient for mine). 660nm LEDs are running at 400mA and consuming 30W (including driver) the 630s are running at 580mA and consuming 35W (including driver). All together the t5s and all the LEDs are consuming 195W
Those 2 that are missing from the 1st row 3rd from the right were causing the string to flicker, you test them like Christmas lights one at a time, shorting the string in the middle and working your way through. There are currently 5 that have been removed/ shorted for troubleshooting purposes.
Supplementing the LEDs are 4 T5s (6500K & 5000K) with aluminum tape reflectors and 2 T5’s (3000K) in canopy, attached to SCROG (no reflectors on these).
Ventilation:
each the T5 fluorescents have their own dedicated cool tube, made out of a T12 protective plastic tube connected via a black sump pump hose (cheap black 1.5” diameter hosing) to forced air vents.Air vents are made out of 1 gallon containers (one was steel from bulk tomatoes, and the other was a Nestle Quick with paperboard sides, and a steel bottom) with 6x 1.5” holes drilled into the bottoms.
Interior vents are molded with clay to divert the air from the sharp edges of the vent increasing efficiency, and reducing noise. (I actually did this wrong, the exhaust needs to be sculpted on the fan side down to a square hole, I will fix this after harvest, might take a few dB’s of the bottom line, which is already pretty low). It is important that both the inside of your air vents, and your tubing is black to prevent light from getting out (good bye stealth), or getting in (hello hermies).
vents attached to wall with original lids and electrical tape around edge
There is a simple aluminum tape reflector on each of the cool tubes. Initially they were ( V ) shaped inside the cool tubes using folded paper, but I realized that the fluorescent leads could short through the reflector so I scrapped it. A workaround would be to use nonconductive something (that won’t burn or melt) to levitate the bulbs. The bulbs are centered in the tubes with recycled metal wire salvaged from a used 5 subject notebook.
With and without reflector for comparison
Mechanism for floating bulbs - Recycled notebook wire and "14-16g AMP female disconnects" with the plastic removed (if I left the plastic on it would have also prevented shorting on the reflector, but would have been harder to connect and secure). The unhappy face is because this is one of the bulbs which was shorted by the reflector (have not noticed any detrimental effects to the bulb as a result).
Scraped design due to bulb shorting
The cab itself is exhausted by 1 80mm pc fan in the utility room pulling through a 5” carbon filter. All fans are adjustable via controller in utility room. The air intakes are passive and located on the rear kick plate of the cabinet. The air enters the area under the floor via 8 2.25” dia. Holes, it then travels through the cabinet floor via 5 3” dia holes, it then enters the ventilation room via 6 3” dia holes and through the 3” dia holes that the fans are attached to. The area under the cab is painted black and has a black bottom along the carpet (the extra shelves painted and cut) to prevent light leaks.
Medium:
5x 0.8gal Airpots https://www.icmag.com/ic/showthread.php?t=166467 filled with Botanicare coco
watered via Blumats https://www.icmag.com/ic/showthread.php?t=111046&highlight=blumats
from gravity fed 5gal bucket in top space.
Nutes:
GH flora with H3ds 6/9 recipe.Ladies:
(name - strain - meaning (if known) - origin)Tatyana – Train Wreck - Russian
Chinwe – Cheese – “God owns” - Igbo
Lilly – Lemon Skunk – “Lily flower” - English
Wren – White Rhino – “small bird” - English
Ginger – Great White Shark – “redish orange color” – English
Lessons learned:
-Soldering things this small is a PITA, even with a high quality soldering iron. Silver epoxy makes the job MUCH easier, and does not expose the LEDs to the heat stress of soldering; also good for securing wire copper tape connections. -When connecting heat sinks together lay out wires and connect before screwing in, it creates a cleaner and better connection.
-redundantly reinforce the connections between wires and copper tape. When flipped upside down gravity pulls on wires and breaks connections.
-Reflectors shorting out bulbs (see above)
-Make cool tubes longer so that you can store the tubing in them allowing easy raising and lowering of lamp.
-Let the clay in the vents dry out slowly because otherwise they will crack (NBD if they do because you lather them with paint anyway).
-Want to figure out a drainage system for the bottom (currently no drain with the blumats, but would like the ability to flush).
Special thanks to KNNA for sourcing the LEDs and helping out a ton.
Special thanks to my buddy Citizen-S for all the soldering help.