LED obtained from Led4Power on a 20mm copper MCPCB.
LED heatsinked on a Coolermaster GeminII S CPU cooler with a 120mm corsair SP fan at full speed.
Thermal Grizzly Conductonaut liquid metal used between the MCPCB and heatsink.
MCPCB tightened down with two screws.
Luxmeter is an LX1330B.
Distance from LED to luxmeter measured with a UT393B laser meter at 1m +/- 0.01
Stray light from LED blocked using Edmund Optics flock paper to avoid reflections.
Current was monitored with a UT210E clamp meter.
Power supply used is a DPS5020, also used for the voltage readings.
Die area used for calculations is from datasheet, 1.03mm x 1.03mm
Results:
Very impressive LED under extreme cooling.
Peak reached at ~5.6A, would not recommend going this high in a flashlight host.
Should be close to 700cd/mm^2 with an RLT collar, if I feel like it I might redo the test with a collar on it.
Yeah it won’t die, you can see from djozz’s test that it can handle a lot of current (probably thanks to no bond wires)
It just heats up too much and output starts dropping.
Yeah in a normal flashlight the peak will be at around 4A, more like djozz’s test.
Even at 3A you get msot of the performance.
This would be a great LED to swap into all those flashlights that have a 3A driver usually driving an XP-L HI at 1000lm.
I really wanted to know how far I could push it Should I try make a 7Mcd optofire?
What is the focal point relative to the Cree led? Do I need a shorter or taller spacer? I am having trouble focusing these and creating as tight of a spot as the xpe2 they replaced.
Output looks about the same intensity as before, but I still don’t have a light meter to verify. I am also not driving these hard enough as I am putting about 2.5A . Tint on the other hand is way better than a dedomed xpe2.
Did another test, this time with a small RLT collar.
The LED reached its peak sooner, at about 5.3A instead of 5.6, likely due to the additional heating of the die.
About a 2x improvement from the small collar.
So driving the CSLNM1.TG at 4A nets ≈90% of maximum performance, and is probably close to the maximum attainable in a flashlight due to thermal reasons.
Indeed interesting. Has this led emitter been tint and CRI tested? :-D