I used a 24 chip panel for the rear light - this one doesn't get hot.
I used a 36 chip panel in the AFT - this one doesn't get hot.
I used a 48 chip panel in each of the cab lights - these get very hot when left on but are OK for normal use.
I used a 112 chip panel for the main light - this gets very hot quite quickly.
The heat seems to get worse when the engine is running or when on hookup (battery charging) - but this makes sense as they are given a higher voltage. The small panels still don't seem to get hot even with the engine running.
So the only one that bothers me is the main light as that one gets the hottest and is the one we often want to use the most.
Originally I stuck it in place using double sided foam tape but this fell down on the first use when it got hot.
Whilst we have been away it has been sitting against the inside of the plastic cover and the plastic gets very hot to the touch, so we have been careful with how long it has been left on.
So my thoughts were...
Get three of the 36 LED panels and wire them up together - stick all 3 in the light housing and fingers crossed they won't get hot but will give out a similar amount of light. (Even better if I could rig up a switch to allow me to switch between 1, 2 or 3 panels - for brightness control)
Create a heatsink to dissipate the heat better.
Put a voltage regulator in place to keep the voltage at 12v and no more.
I decided to try the heatsink first and see what happens. I took the opportunity to fix the panel in properly as well so it can't drop down. I went for a very basic heatsink to start with - I cut a piece of alloy and bolted the COB panel to it. I had to drill the holes in the panel out to fit some little bolts through but it seemed OK with that!
I then bolted the alloy plate into the housing using some nuts as legs to give good air flow around the heatsink.
Put it all back together and the alloy plate certainly does its job as it gets very hot too! Not sure if that really helps though?
I'm not sure if the heat matters now either - the panel is held away from the lens so won't melt it and hopefully the plate behind will spread the heat a bit?
I'm sure I've got some old heatsinks from old computers somewhere (might have chucked them) but that was going to be my next try - could mount a few on the back of the alloy plate to give more surface area.
What are your thoughts?
In my box of wires I did find an old adapter which was used for powering a 9v CD player in the car, but it is switchable on the front to 12v. I'm wondering if it is worth putting that on the main light too, to regulate the power to 12v.
