Howell
Storage? I am Storage!
(no reason to put existing wiring in the conduit, that is for future expansion).
Conduit keeps you from having a screw invade your wiring.
(no reason to put existing wiring in the conduit, that is for future expansion).
You could run wiring to 120VAC code and just use it for low voltage by connecting to a transformer or power supply. Romex will work just fine for that actually.The question is, is it possible to run normal-ish wiring while accomplishing this task? If I were to put the transformer near the circuit breaker, and wire the DC channels to code with 12-3 Romex, than they could be converted back to 120v AC if I decided to sell.
Not hard at all. I have a driver that can do it with about 8 parts ( and a few more if you want a dimming control ). Actually, what you would be doing is taking the 48VDC and feeding it to a constant current driver driving a string of LEDs. For 48VDC you could have maybe a dozen LEDs per driver. There's no need to convert the 48VDC to 12VDC. The fixtures you use could be designed to work right off 48 VDC ( or 24 VDC should you decide to use that instead ). 12-3 should be able to carry at least 20 amps. Even at 24 VDC that's 480 watts-plenty to light up several rooms decently with LEDs.Also, how tricky is it to convert the 48v DC to 12v DC for fixtures?
For longest life you should aim for a junction temperature of 60°C or less. How hot the heat sink should be to maintain that depends upon which LEDs you use, and what current you run them at. For example, the XM LED has a junction-to-case thermal resistance of 2°C/W. If you run them at 2 amps, that's ~6.8 watts per LED. About 2 watts comes out as light, leaving 4.8 watts of heat. That's a temperature rise of 4.8 * 2 = 9.6°C above the heat sink. So for the XM LED at 2 amps, you would need to keep the heat sink at around 50°C in order to keep junction temperature at 60°C.What temperature should I be keeping these LEDs at? Perhaps a "mast" of copper or aluminum to a "sail" above the insulation?
The ceiling will have significant amounts of insulation. I know LEDs need to be kept cool. If there were two feet of insulation directly on top of the fixture, and I only wanted the emitter exposed below, how would I cool it?
First thought is a water loop, but there might be a simpler solution.
I agree, any technique that sends that heat from in the insulated envelope to the outside in an uncontrolled fashion is a leak.
At the same time, even if it is only 6W per LED, that would be 72W for the 12 in the bedroom and 288W for the 48 in the great room. Being able to selectively include that heat in the winter and exclude it during the summer would be a significant asset to a house as well insulated as this one will be.
You could reroute the cold water pipe that goes to the hot water system through the roof, first use it to cool the leds and then run it through a solar hot water system before dumping it in the heater. Super efficient.
You could even extend the idea to your PC and build a heat exchanger on to your existing water cooling rig. You may occasionally have to take a break from gaming to go have a hot shower or do some washing up though, especially on warm days.
You really don't want to go down the halogen downlight path. It's highly inefficient, the bulbs are short-lived unless you buy the really expensive ones, and you have to clear insulation above and around each light fitting.
Halogens are good for accent lighting. Otherwise, they suck.
My condo is full of recessed cans. I kept the incandescent lights wherever I wanted a dimmer and everywhere else I got cheap CFLs from Home Depot.
I'm not sure I really like recessed cans. The light is very direct and hurts my eyes. Especially laying in bed with the lights on (even dimmed) is annoying.