****PSA: Don't try doing this if you don't know what you're doing. You could burn down your house and yourself with it. Electrical work should only be done by professionals******
With that being said, I'm going to be doing some electrical work on my LED lights. I will just be extending the cable between the light and the ballast. During the summertime it gets way too hot in that room so I want to be able to remove the ballast from the tent in other to reduce the heat in there. For the winter I like to keep it in the tent too provide warmth for the plants.
As we all know, most board style LED lights usually have the ballast mounted on the board with a really short cable. Nowadays some of the better more high-end lights have a long cable so you can have the option of keeping the ballast out of the tent. My lights unfortunately don't. I'm going to start with the spider farmer light because I have more cable to work with.
I have some waterproof quick connect 16awg 3-prong junction boxes coming. Easy peasy cable splicing. Especially since they're using 16AWG cable instead of copper wire, I don't have to worry about cable fraying.
I'm going to cut the cable between the board and the ballast.
Board <--Connector to extension cable to connector ----> ballast
It's 3 prongs so Live (+) , Negative (-) , and Ground (/). No tricky wiring, no 3 way junctions, just simple straight run. I could even use those heat shrinky ones but, I just feel a little safer with the whole waterproof casing. It's going to look professional AF.
Pretty simple cable junction. I won't have to upgrade these lights for a few more years. This is going to be year 3 for my Spider Farmer SF2000 and they still consistently grow awesome flower. In truth, they might grow better than the Viparspectra even though the Viparspectra has more even PAR readings on a meter.
I want to extend the cable on the Viparspectra because having 2x ballasts in 1 tent is even worse than the single big one in the 2x3. I have more heat issues in the 2x4 with those 2x ballasts at 130°F or more. The problem with the Viparspectra is the cable length. I have literally 3 inches of cable. There's literally no room for mistakes, otherwise, you'll be soldering cable in the ballast. That's not something I want to do. I want to keep it simple. The other problem with the Viparspectra lights is that second smaller cable. I'm almost certain that it goes either towards the switch or towards the knob and it either controls the dimming or the switch that allows you to daisy chain. That cable is even shorter than the other one. Just more of a hassle. I jumped the gun on these lights a little I shouldn't have gotten two of them. They're good lights but they're just too hot and I can't control them with the controller; They feel very basic.
If these quick connects allow me to strip minimal cable and then I'll redo all my lights. Otherwise I have to spend $550-600 on bar style grow lights with removable ballasts vs. $40 on some connectors and cable. It'll give me even better control of my micro environment in the tent and my lung room. It will increase the life span of the LED lights themselves without having a hot ballast attached to them.
Any thoughts? Comments? Suggestions?
I've been doing electrical work for about 15-20 years. I've done a lot more complicated stuff inside of computer boxes than what we're dealing here with a simple cable splice.
With that being said, I'm going to be doing some electrical work on my LED lights. I will just be extending the cable between the light and the ballast. During the summertime it gets way too hot in that room so I want to be able to remove the ballast from the tent in other to reduce the heat in there. For the winter I like to keep it in the tent too provide warmth for the plants.
As we all know, most board style LED lights usually have the ballast mounted on the board with a really short cable. Nowadays some of the better more high-end lights have a long cable so you can have the option of keeping the ballast out of the tent. My lights unfortunately don't. I'm going to start with the spider farmer light because I have more cable to work with.
I have some waterproof quick connect 16awg 3-prong junction boxes coming. Easy peasy cable splicing. Especially since they're using 16AWG cable instead of copper wire, I don't have to worry about cable fraying.
I'm going to cut the cable between the board and the ballast.
Board <--Connector to extension cable to connector ----> ballast
It's 3 prongs so Live (+) , Negative (-) , and Ground (/). No tricky wiring, no 3 way junctions, just simple straight run. I could even use those heat shrinky ones but, I just feel a little safer with the whole waterproof casing. It's going to look professional AF.
Pretty simple cable junction. I won't have to upgrade these lights for a few more years. This is going to be year 3 for my Spider Farmer SF2000 and they still consistently grow awesome flower. In truth, they might grow better than the Viparspectra even though the Viparspectra has more even PAR readings on a meter.
I want to extend the cable on the Viparspectra because having 2x ballasts in 1 tent is even worse than the single big one in the 2x3. I have more heat issues in the 2x4 with those 2x ballasts at 130°F or more. The problem with the Viparspectra is the cable length. I have literally 3 inches of cable. There's literally no room for mistakes, otherwise, you'll be soldering cable in the ballast. That's not something I want to do. I want to keep it simple. The other problem with the Viparspectra lights is that second smaller cable. I'm almost certain that it goes either towards the switch or towards the knob and it either controls the dimming or the switch that allows you to daisy chain. That cable is even shorter than the other one. Just more of a hassle. I jumped the gun on these lights a little I shouldn't have gotten two of them. They're good lights but they're just too hot and I can't control them with the controller; They feel very basic.
If these quick connects allow me to strip minimal cable and then I'll redo all my lights. Otherwise I have to spend $550-600 on bar style grow lights with removable ballasts vs. $40 on some connectors and cable. It'll give me even better control of my micro environment in the tent and my lung room. It will increase the life span of the LED lights themselves without having a hot ballast attached to them.
Any thoughts? Comments? Suggestions?
I've been doing electrical work for about 15-20 years. I've done a lot more complicated stuff inside of computer boxes than what we're dealing here with a simple cable splice.
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