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2014年2月26日星期三

Cree XML-T6 LED emitter 10w 850lm-Pure White-16mm




Cree XML-T6 LED

Power: 3w – 10w,
LED amount: 1 pcs,
Lumen: 300lm @ 3w, 850lm @ 10w,
Current: 0.7A – 3A,
Voltage: 3.7V,
PCB diameter: 16mm, 20mm
Color temperature: netural white, warm white





XLamp XM-L LEDs offer the unique combination of very high efficacy at very high drive currents, delivering 1000 lumens with 100 lumens-per-watt efficacy at 3 A in a compact, 5-mm x 5-mm footprint. With its breakthrough light output and efficacy, the XM-L LED is designed for very-high-lumen applications such as high-bay, indoor commercial or roadway lighting. The XM-L LED can lower total system cost by reducing the number of LEDs and optics in the system.


Specifications



  • Size (mm x mm) 5 x 5

  • Maximum drive current (A) 3

  • Maximum power (W) 10

  • Light output Up to 1040 lm @ 10 W

  • Typical forward voltage (V) 3.1

  • Viewing angle (degrees) 125

  • Binning ANSI

  • Thermal resistance (°C/W) 2.5

  • Reflow-solderable Yes – JEDEC J-STD-020C-compatible

  • RoHS and REACH-compliant Yes

  • UL-recognized-component Yes – Level 4 Enclosure Consideration


Features



  • Maximum drive current: 3000 mA

  • Low thermal resistance: 2.5 °C/W

  • Maximum junction temperature: 150 °C

  • viewing angle: 125°

  • Available in cool white, 80-CRI minimum neutral white and 80-CRI, 85-CRI and 90-CRI warm white

  • ANSI-compatible chromaticity bins

  • Unlimited floor life at ≤ 30 ºC/85% RH

  • Reflow solderable – JeDeC J-STD-020C

  • electrically neutral thermal path

  • RoHS- and REACh-compliant

  • UL-recognized component (e349212)

  • High Lumen Output, High Efficacy


Applications



  • Directional

  • Low- & High-Bay

  • Roadway & Parking

  • High-End Portable


Download Cree XLamp XM-L LEDs datasheet



$5.00


Buy at KiwiLighting.com: Cree XML-T6 LED emitter 10w 850lm-Pure White-16mm



Cree XML-T6 LED emitter 10w 850lm-Pure White-16mm

2014年2月12日星期三

Cree Improves CXA Array LEDs for LED Industry’s Highest Lumen Density

Durham North Carolina-based Cree Inc., has launched three new LED arrays with double the light output of existing CXA LED arrays without increasing the size. According to Cree, the XLamp® CXA2590, CXA1850 and CXA1310 High-Density LED Arrays have an unprecidented increase in lumen density. Cree asserts that this new level of lumen density creates new levels of light intensity, enables the complete replacement of ceramic metal halide (CMH) light sources, expands the abilities of LED spotlights, and makes possible applications that could not be addressed by previous LED technologies.


Cree Improves CXA Array LEDs for Industry’s Highest Lumen Density Cree’s improved CXA Array LEDs with industry’s highest lumen density unlock new designs and applications for LED lighting


“The beauty of these new high-density LED arrays from Cree is that they are helping us bring products to the market that currently don’t exist,” said Mike Wang, vice president, lighting engineering, Edison Price Lighting, Inc. “Never before have we been able to harness such a large amount of light in such a small package, which can help us improve our lighting designs and address a number of applications that we previously could not.”


Cree says that the CXA2590 Array’s emission of more than 15,500 lumens from a 19 mm light source, makes possible luminaires with the same center beam candlepower (CBCP) and light quality of a 150-watt CMH light source at lower power, with longer lifetime and better control. Delivering more than 9,000 lumens from a 12 mm light source, the CXA1850 LED Array provides the same CBCP and light quality as 70-watt CMH while using half the power. Cree notes that the CXA1310 LED Array delivers more than 2,000 lumens in a 6 mm light source. According to Cree, this gives lighting manufacturers the opportunity to design smaller, more efficient track lights, reduce the size of halogen replacements by half and deliver twice the CBCP of CMH at 30 percent less power.


“Having access to such intense light sources without having to account for lots of variation in size is a tremendous benefit to our product design process,” said Seok-Ki Park, CEO, Hwang-Duck Engineering Co., LTD. “We have the flexibility to increase our design options while protecting our investment in ongoing product development.”


Like all CXA LED Arrays, the new arrays are characterized and binned at 85°C, available in ANSI White and EasyWhite® color temperatures (2700K – 6500K), and with CRI options of 70, 80 and 95. Samples of all three new high-density LED arrays are available now and production quantities are available with standard lead times.


About Cree, Inc.


Cree-LED-logo Cree-LED-logo


Cree, Inc. is a global, industry-leading manufacturer of lighting-class LEDs, LED lighting technologies, and semiconductor solutions for radio frequency (RF) and power applications. Cree is paving the way for the LED lighting revolution by producing long-lasting, energy-efficient LED lighting, rendering traditional technologies obsolete.


Cree’s LED Components and Modules division includes the market’s brightest and most reliable lighting-class LEDs, including the Cree XLamp® LED portfolio. By featuring light that is both efficient and beautiful, Cree LED components and modules offer lighting manufacturers and designers high-performance LEDs and LED modules that lower system cost.


Cree leads the industry in brightness and reliability for power LEDs with its XLamp LED family. Through XLamp LEDs, Cree is enabling the lighting industry with efficient LED light. With the largest family of high-performance, commercially-available LEDs, Cree has the right LED for your design.


Cree LEDs in our shop



Cree Improves CXA Array LEDs for LED Industry’s Highest Lumen Density

2014年2月10日星期一

Cree gets smart with SmartCast LED lighting controller

Over the past two years we’ve seen Cree transition from an LED manufacturer with a presence in related industries to a major force in the LED lighting market. Now that the company has a firm footing in the consumer LED space, it has set its sights back on business with the SmartCast lighting control system.


cree-smartcast-led-lighting-controller cree-smartcast-led-lighting-controller


With all the talk about LiFX and Hue, it’s easy to forget that lighting control systems were originally designed for — and are still best utilized in — very big spaces. Offices, parking garages, data centers, and factories can all benefit greatly from smart lighting controls and as businesses start to make this move en masse, Cree wants to be right there with them. SmartCast is a lighting control system that networks together up to 250 light fixtures, intelligently groups them, and gives them access to a wireless control system. It’s smart, cheap to install, efficient, and — unlike the competition — should be dead simple to operate.


Cree SmartCast lighting control system


What SmartCast offers businesses right now is a 70% drop in energy usage associated with their lighting compared to current fluorescent systems. As lighting is a major source of power usage for most businesses, we’re talking about serious money here. The majority of that efficiency boost will come simply from moving to LED lighting, but that’s just the first step. After that, SmartCast will use motion sensing, dimming, and daylight harvesting (dimming the lights when it’s sunny outside) to account for the other 30%.


cree-smartcast-led-lighting-controller-2 cree-smartcast-led-lighting-controller-2


SmartCast controllerRight now businesses know they can cut down on power usage by utilizing intelligent controls for their lighting, but most have avoided doing so because they fear the expense and complication involved. Cree recognized this and took the problem head on. The initial expense will still be considerable — there is no getting around that — but Cree was able to get SmartCast’s overall pricing down to about 40 cents per square foot. That might sound like a lot, but competitive systems sell for about double that (at least according to Cree).


The more interesting advance, at least to us non-lighting designers, is SmartCast’s simplicity. Up to 250 lights can be placed in a group, all of which are set up with a single remote control. Lights in a group can communicate with one another and, using a unique pattern of flickers, self-organize so they each know where they are relative to the rest. Then, using built-in sensors, lights can dim according to daylight conditions in their area, resulting in serious power savings. Individual zones, like a conference room, can be dimmer with a wal



Cree gets smart with SmartCast LED lighting controller

2014年1月15日星期三

Cree LED lighting arrives at Munich Airport

cree-led-lighting-arrives-at-munich-airport cree-led-lighting-arrives-at-munich-airport


LED lighting solutions developer Cree, Durham, NC, USA, is supplying its LED technology to power the apron and exterior lighting systems of Munich Airport, Germany (“FMG”), one of Europe’s largest international hubs, serving 38 million passengers per year.


Cree collaborated with Ewo, Cortaccia, Italy, a manufacturer of lighting systems designed for public areas, whose F32 flood lights are replacing high-pressure sodium lamps in Munich Airport’s high-mast systems. The F32 was designed to integrate into the existing apron lighting at Munich Airport, and each light is illuminated by up to 288 Cree XLamp XT-E LEDs.


Munich Airport had sought out LED technology to reduce the operating cost of its more than 13,000 outdoor lights. In addition to energy savings, the airport has set itself the goal of maintaining CO2 emissions at their 2005 level – irrespective of future traffic growth.


The airport expects the new flood lights featuring Cree LEDs to consume at least 50 percent less energy than the previously-installed high-pressure sodium lamps, which would result in yearly electricity savings of 122,000 kilowatt-hours and approximately 70 tons of CO2 on completion of phase one of the lighting overhaul.


Through longer-term replacement of its 3,000 apron floodlights and 10,200 exterior lights, the airport expects to save more than 5,000 tons of CO2 annually. Cree says that by their use of energy- and cost-efficient LED technology, the brilliant white light emitted by the F32 floodlight gives a higher color rendering value to more accurately display colors and provide enhanced visibility compared to the old lamps.


cree-led-lighting-arrives-at-munich-airport cree-led-lighting-arrives-at-munich-airport


Refit will save more than 5,000t of CO2 annually.


The importance of airport lighting to the safe management of air traffic cannot be overstated. “Assuring the safety of our passengers, planes and their crew, airport staff and any other visitor is a priority at Munich Airport,” said Günther Sellmeier, planning and project manager for exterior lighting, engineering and facilities, at FMG.


Cree technology is providing lighting for more than just the apron: all implemented floodlights can be universally equipped with a variety of optical lenses and the Ewo Light Management System for additional flexibility, allowing the technology to be adapted to various different situations. One version has been designed especially for airport street lighting to ensure that surrounding roadways are also optimally lit.



Cree LED lighting arrives at Munich Airport

2013年12月14日星期六

Cree And Competitors Put LED Lighting In The Spotlight

the-rockefeller-center-in-new-york-city-lights-its-annual-christmas-tree-energy-efficient-led-lights the-rockefeller-center-in-new-york-city-lights-its-annual-christmas-tree-energy-efficient-led-lights


More than 130 years after Thomas Edison sparked a new industry with the incandescent light bulb, his invention is finally giving way to newer innovations.


Light-emitting diodes — a form of semiconductor chip that generates light — produce the crisp, energy-saving backlit displays for TV sets, laptops and smartphones.


The technology has been gaining traction in those markets over the past 15 years. But in other markets, the LED lights were more clunky and costly than the established incandescent and fluorescent competition. That barred the technology from the bigger opportunity — lighting homes, offices and large-scale outdoor applications.


The Rockefeller Center in New York City lights its annual Christmas tree energy-efficient LED lights. LEDs are commonplace in automobiles as well as…

The Rockefeller Center in New York City lights its annual Christmas tree energy-efficient LED lights. LEDs are commonplace in automobiles as well as… View Enlarged Image

Design and cost breakthroughs, and rising desire for energy efficiency, have begun dismantling those barriers.


A scrum of LED makers are competing for precedence. Among those are Philips Lumileds, General Electric (GE), the Cooper Lighting unit of Eaton (ETN), Acuity Brands (AYI) and Soraa in the U.S.

Germany’s Osram Sylvania has a heavy hand in the market. Several Asia-based players also figure into the mix. In South Korea, Epistar and Everlight Electronics, Seoul Semiconductor, Samsung and LG Innotek are involved, as well as Nichia, based in Japan.


Suppliers of chips used by those companies include Veeco Instruments (VECO), STM Microelectronics (STM) and Japan-based Toyoda Gosei.


One pioneer at the head of the field is North Carolina-based Cree (CREE), which has been developing LED materials and devices for 26 years. Several breakthroughs by Cree influenced the company in 2006 to pursue commercial lighting markets, including outdoor municipal lighting and industrial and office ceiling fixtures.


“People scoffed,” said Mike Watson, vice president of product strategy at Cree. “But we’ve always been an innovator and we committed to making the shift.”


The following year, a tanking economy sent Cree’s earnings down 58% on a 7% decline in revenue. Revenue growth quickly recovered. Earnings struggled back above 2006 levels in 2010.


But the company stuck to its guns and expanded its research efforts in order to crack the residential lighting markets. This year, the company broke a critical barrier.


In March, the company introduced a 40-watt LED light bulb for under $10. The new 60-watt bulbs were under $13. Research by Canaccord Genuity shows that consumer acceptance for LED bulbs is “very high” when priced under $10.


“The lower prices have opened the biggest market opportunity,” said Canaccord analyst Jonathan Dorsheimer.


Home Depot (HD) began pushing the bulbs aggressively. The prices dropped further when Cree received the U.S. Environmental Agency’s Energy Star seal of approval. That gave consumers a utility-subsidized discount.


Cree recently added a 75-watt LED bulb to the lineup for $23.97. The company claims the bulbs last 25,000 hours — effectively 25 times longer than incandescent bulbs — and use 84% less energy.

Incandescent Meets Its Match


Watson said the market for light bulbs across the board worldwide is a $1 trillion business. Consumer purchases are the smaller piece, about 20% of the total. Commercial and industrial is 80%.

“But it’s the consumer that leads every market transition,” Watson said.


Consumers also tend to preface changes in business behavior, Watson said, “so we wanted to capture the hearts and minds of consumers.”


Cree hasn’t been alone.


The LED market got a bonus in 2007 when Congress passed the Energy Independence & Security Act. Among its provisions were a series of mandates for the gradual phase-out of incandescent lighting. Europe is ahead of the U.S. in this regard as it began to implement a ban of incandescent light bulbs in 2009. China is also phasing out incandescent bulbs, as is Japan.


The push to phase out energy-wasting incandescent bulbs is part of a global trend to lower energy consumption and carbon dioxide emissions. It also opens the door for a massive upgrade to LED lights.


Lighting accounts for approximately 19% of purchased electricity worldwide. Energy-efficient fluorescent technology has helped lessen that amount but, judging by consumer tastes, fluorescent lighting is not as good as incandescent. With the rise of LEDs, incandescent bulbs may have met their match. “The LED industry is on the cusp of beginning a multiyear secular growth scenario,” Dorsheimer said.


Market Set To Double In Size

He estimates there were about 17 billion residential lighting sockets globally in 2012, 7 billion commercial sockets, 1.2 billion industrial and 1.4 billion outdoors sockets. More than half of those sockets will have upgraded to LED lighting by 2020, possibly as many as 80%, he estimates.


“The basic everyday Edison bulb is going away and will ultimately be replaced with LED,” said David Petina, research analyst at Freedonia Group. Compared with he other alternatives, including halogen, LED bulbs have the best lighting for the price when energy costs are included.


Freedonia estimates the U.S. market for LED bulbs, for indoor and outdoor lighting, including LEDs in motor vehicles, flashlights and decorative lighting, will more than double in the next five years to $7.3 billion in 2017 from $3.3 billion in 2012.


And while general lighting is the biggest market segment, many other markets are energized for the LED transition. Currently, about 60% of LED consumption is by TVs, smartphones and displays. That will shift as LED lighting enters more homes and offices. Multicolor LED lights are used increasingly in aircraft and automobiles, not to mention billboards, agriculture, ports, harbors and mines.


“The LED market is poised for very fast growth,” said Petina.


$250 Billion In Energy Savings?


The basic light-emitting diode produces light as electrons pass through a semiconductor material. The initial discovery of electroluminescence occurred in 1907. But it wasn’t until the 1960s that the technology began making its forays into expensive electronic devices such as laboratory and electronics test equipment and lasers. Then came radios, telephones, calculators and TVs. LED technology is sometimes referred to as solid-state lighting, a category that also includes organic light emitting diodes, or OLED.


Watson said it’s about time LED got put in the spotlight.


“What other technology do you have at home that dates back to 1879?” he said, referring to incandescent bulbs. “LED costs are coming down fast and consumers and businesses now recognize it’s worth the investment.”


A Bank of America Merrill Lynch report published in April detailed the LED market as a rapidly emerging opportunity.


“Spurred on by legislation, LEDs could represent 45% of the global lighting market by 2015,” the report said. “Residential LEDs could represent 70% of the general light market by 2020.”

More mind-boggling, the report estimated U.S. adoption of LEDs could result in energy savings of $250 billion by 2030. The report also estimated the global LED market in 2012 at $11.6 billion.

Dorsheimer at Canaccord Genuity thinks some of the best and brightest opportunities for LED expansion have yet to be discovered. For example, research has demonstrated that students perform better when learning under high-quality artificial light. Research is underway on the psychological and physiological affects of illumination in health care, the workplace, educational facilities and the home. This includes the effect of color-tunable lighting that LEDs can accommodate.


Boeing installed LED lighting in its energy-efficient 787 Dreamliners with multiple color lighting themes that can be changed for cruising time, meal time, lighting to simulate sunrise and sunset and other changes in ambiance.


Experiments in LED lighting are also taking place in industrial applications in areas, such as the drying of inks, coatings and adhesives without solvent emissions. In agricultural and horticultural applications, the ability of spectrally tuned light may enable farmers to increase and improve the output of produce and livestock.


The categories all simply mark beachheads where the technology is taking hold, Dorsheimer says, pointing to multiple usage models out there that have not been fully uncovered.


“The first wave is about replacement bulbs and energy efficiency,” said Dorsheimer, “but as we go through this analog to digital transition in lighting there’s a whole host of new things to address.”



Cree And Competitors Put LED Lighting In The Spotlight

2013年12月12日星期四

Cree awarded $30 million tax credits to expand production of LED lighting

Tax-Credits Tax-Credits


Cree Inc. will receive $30 million in federal tax credits to expand its manufacturing footprint in Racine County as well as in Durham, N.C., the U.S. Department of Energy said Thursday.


The company’s expansion includes the purchase, installation and modification of new machinery that will allow Cree to produce advanced LED lighting systems.


“With this project, Cree is taking the next step toward its goal of making traditional lighting products obsolete through the use of advanced LED technology with significant estimated annual savings,” according to the department.


Cree, based in North Carolina, acquired Wisconsin-based Ruud Lighting and its BetaLED division in a 2011 acquisition. Several months later the company announced plans for an expansion of its Sturtevant factory and distribution center.


The tax credits were part of $150 million in advanced energy manufacturing tax credits announced Thursday.


The new round of credits was announced to make use of credits that were not used by previously selected companies, according to the Energy Department.


The credits are designed to aid in the production of equipment used in clean energy technologies, from energy efficiency technologies like LED to wind and solar.


“Cost-effective, efficient manufacturing plays a critical role in continuing U.S. leadership in clean energy innovation, and the tax credits announced today will help reduce carbon pollution from our vehicles and buildings; create new jobs and supply more clean energy projects in the United States and abroad with equipment made in America,” said Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz in a prepared statement.


Cree had previously announced a $24.5 million expansion in Sturtevant, adding 208,000 square feet to house LED lighting assembly lines and an expanded distribution center.


The company committed to creating 469 full-time jobs from the expansion, and received state and local incentives valued at more than $8 million.


About Cree, Inc.


Cree-LED-logo Cree-LED-logo


Cree, Inc. is a global, industry-leading manufacturer of lighting-class LEDs, LED lighting technologies, and semiconductor solutions for radio frequency (RF) and power applications. Cree is paving the way for the LED lighting revolution by producing long-lasting, energy-efficient LED lighting, rendering traditional technologies obsolete.


Cree’s LED Components and Modules division includes the market’s brightest and most reliable lighting-class LEDs, including the Cree XLamp® LED portfolio. By featuring light that is both efficient and beautiful, Cree LED components and modules offer lighting manufacturers and designers high-performance LEDs and LED modules that lower system cost.


Cree leads the industry in brightness and reliability for power LEDs with its XLamp LED family. Through XLamp LEDs, Cree is enabling the lighting industry with efficient LED light. With the largest family of high-performance, commercially-available LEDs, Cree has the right LED for your design.


Cree LED modules provide a simple solution for lighting designers and manufacturers to adopt best-in-class LED lighting, accelerating time to market and lowering system cost. For more information, visit www.cree.com.



Cree awarded $30 million tax credits to expand production of LED lighting

2013年12月4日星期三

Nichia, Everlight, Cree, Osram, Connected Lighting

Nichia and Everlight continue to scrap over intellectual property with the former taking new action, while Cree and Osram make executive appointments and The Connected Lighting Alliance will study commercial indoor SSL.


LED-Intellectual_Property LED-Intellectual_Property


Nichia has announced new filings with the US District Court in its ongoing LED-centric patent dispute with Everlight Electronics. Cree and Osram have both made changes to their board of directors, and Cree promoted Norbert Hiller and launched a new LED lamp. The Connected Lighting Alliance, comprising some of the industry’s top lighting companies, has announced plans to study the controls situation in the indoor commercial solid-state lighting (SSL) sector.


Nichia and Everlight


Nichia and Everlight have waged an extended intellectual property (IP) battle with Nichia generally claiming Everlight has infringed the former’s patents, and Everlight attacking the validity of Nichia’s patents. In the latest amended complaint filed in US District Court for the Eastern District of Texas, Nichia asserts that Everlight, subsidiaries Everlight Americas and Zenaro Lighting, and Zenaro distributor Zitroz LLC are infringing four Nichia patents.


The latest action amends a September 11, 2013 filing centered on one specific Nichia US patent — 7,432,589 — and extends the claim to cover patents 7,462,870, 7,521,863, and 8,530,250. The lawsuit (2:13-cv-703) is pending before District Judge J. Rodney Gilstrap and Magistrate Judge Roy M. Payne.


As Nichia acknowledged in its most recent press announcement, the companies have active legal disputes ongoing in several other countries including Japan and Germany. In September, Nichia announced that a German court ruled in its favor in an infringement case. There has still been no word on damages in that action and apparently Everlight is still seeking to have the German court nullify the patent in question.


Everlight has also attacked the validity of a Nichia patent in the US this past March, and prior to that had filed its own patent infringement lawsuit against Nichia.


Cree lamp and exec moves


Moving to some product news and executive reshuffling, Cree has added a 75W-equivalent Soft White LED lamp to its A-lamp family. Apparently the design is near identical to the 60W product in terms of the LEDs used, although the drive current has been increased to enable 1100-lm output. The main change in the design is a noticeably bulkier and heavier heat sink to keep the LEDs cool at the elevated current. We have a detailed article on the A-19 SSL retrofit lamp over on our Illumination in Focus website.


Cree also has appointed Norbert Hiller to the position of executive vice president lighting. Hiller has served in a similar role in the company’s LED operation for more than two years. Apparently the move was driven by Cree’s increasing presence in the lighting space as witnessed by the lamp announcement.


“The growth in our LED fixture business combined with the success of the Cree LED bulb has expanded the scale of our lighting business and increased the focus on sales and marketing,” said Cree chairman and CEO Chuck Swoboda. “Norbert brings a unique skill set and track record of success to the next phase of Cree’s growth.”


Cree also announced that Anne Whitaker has been appointed to the company’s Board of Directors. Whitaker is president of Sanofi’s North American Pharmaceuticals operation. Swoboda said, “Anne has proven herself to be a leader throughout her career and her extensive experience in strategic management and organizational development will be a tremendous asset to our company as we continue to carry out our mission to accelerate the adoption of LED lighting.”


Osram executive announcement


Osram is also making changes to its Supervisory Board. Peter Bauer is the new chairman for both Osram Licht AG and Osram GmbH. Bauer had previously been a member of both boards and succeeds Siegfried Russwurm as chairman.


Osram had said back in June that Russwurm would be stepping down, and Bauer is a ready replacement having served as deputy chairman in the past. Bauer had a long career with Siemens and Infineon, and currently works as a management consultant.


The Connected Lighting Alliance


Moving to something of a technology story, The Connected Lighting Alliance has announced that it has formed a study group focused on lighting networks and controls for the commercial space. Previously the industry organization has been focused on the residential sector, having endorsed ZigBee Light Link as the technology of choice.


The action in the commercial sector focused on indoor lighting could have a major business impact because of the companies behind the organization. Founders include GE Lighting, Lutron, Osram, Panasonic, Philips, and Toshiba. If the organization decides to tap a specific technology, the action will carry broad impact.


“After the endorsement of ZigBee Light Link last summer, our members have decided to raise the bar and address the complex solutions required for indoor professional lighting,” said Simon den Uijl, secretary general of The Connected Lighting Alliance. “The benefit of this activity goes beyond stimulating the adoption of wireless lighting solutions and provides the lighting industry with an opportunity to interface with other industry stakeholders, such as building automation companies. We hereby invite any interested company to join the Alliance now and help shape the future of indoor professional lighting.”



Nichia, Everlight, Cree, Osram, Connected Lighting

2013年12月3日星期二

Osram Joins Cree and Philips Lumileds in "Hot-Binning" with Oslon Square

Osram has started hot binning the Oslon Square which reportedly withstands high ambient temperatures particularly well. Osram notes that to ensure that the colors of several LEDs in a luminaire remain uniform even at higher temperatures. They are measured and binned at 85 degrees Celsius (°C), a temperature that comes very close to that encountered in lighting applications within buildings, in everything from spotlights to retrofit light sources. For this reason, Osram contends that measuring and binning at operating temperatures of 85° C is of great significance to customers who further process the light-emitting diodes into luminaires. According to Osram, its OEM customers receive precise information on parameters such as luminous flux or color stability, which they need to optimally define the properties of their products. Osram says it has optimized the heat dissipation of the Oslon Square to allow an increase in the junction temperature.


“With our new conversion technology, we can produce significantly thinner converter layers. The thinner layers better dissipate the heat, thus enabling the higher temperatures in the LED,” says Ivar Tangring, SSL Product Development at Osram Opto Semiconductors. Osram claims that with this heat dissipating structure, Oslon Square can reach a lifetime of considerably more than 50,000 hours even at high temperatures of up to 135° C in the LED.


In addition to longer life, Osram says that the improved temperature behavior leads to higher luminous efficacy in the application. “This luminous efficacy, meaning the ratio of luminous flux to applied electrical power, helps our customers to significantly optimize the price/performance ratio of their luminaire solutions,” Tangring emphasizes. Also, thanks to the higher permitted junction temperatures, fewer large heat sinks are required, the company pointed out


The Oslon Square comes in a color temperature ranging between 2,400 (warm white) and 5,000 Kelvin (cool white). The color rendering index of the LED is over 80 and the luminous flux is an impressive 202 lumens (lm) at 3000K operating at 700mA. This translates to about 100 lm/W at 2.9 V. Currently, Osram says that the new LED is undergoing extensive quality testing including the certification process under the LM-80 long lifetime standard. The results of the 3,000 hour test are expected at the end of the year, those of the 6,000 hour test in spring 2014.




LED hot binning


the-xlamp-mt-g-shown-here-was-the-first-LED-to-be-binned-hot-at-85c the-xlamp-mt-g-shown-here-was-the-first-LED-to-be-binned-hot-at-85c


As the name implies, hot binning is binning the LED lamps at a higher temperature than the conventional 25°C. The LED manufacturers who have decided to launch new products binned at an elevated temperature have converged on 85°C as the new conventional binning temperature. Though 85°C, like 25°C before it, is somewhat arbitrary, it has one major advantage it is a lot closer to the typical operating temperature of many solid-state lighting luminaires than 25°C.


Binning at 85°C makes the initial part of the design process slightly easier and more intuitive. For example, if a designer were working on an LED system that needed 1,000 lumens at an 85°C temperature, then he or she could simply select 10 LED lamps with a luminous flux of 100 lumens per LED, binned at 85°C. Thus, hot binning makes it easy to estimate the performance of these LED lamps in this real-world situation. On the other hand, if the LEDs were binned at 25°C, the same 10 LED lamps would need to be binned at 114 lumens each and de-rated per the LEDs mathematical framework (Fig. 3) to arrive at the same 1,000 lumen goal at the system level.


So, the good news is binning at 85°C makes the first-pass math more intuitive. The bad news is you still have to do the same math if your system runs or ever runs at any temperature other than 85°C. Examples of this would be outdoor luminaires (60° to 65°C is much more common) or freezer cases (20° to 25°C is typical) or downlights in insulated ceilings or almost any retrofit bulb (often over 100°C). In each of these cases the value of binning at 85°C is lost and the designer is back to doing the same math from a new mathematical framework where, arbitrarily, 85°C is now set to equal 100%.




OSLON Square LED


oslon-square--white-2nd-gen oslon-square–white-2nd-gen


Features



  • Different luminous flux packages from one package family

  • High luminous efficacy at high currents

  • Superior corrosion robustness

  • Binned at 85 °C

  • 135 °C Tj max., 1.8 A If max.

  • Package: SMT ceramic package with silicone resin and silicone lens

  • Full CCT range available: 2400 K – 5000 K (warm and neutral white)

  • CRI: min. 80 (typ. 82)

  • Viewing angle at 50 % IV: 120°

  • Luminous Flux: typ. 202 lm @ 3000 K, 85 °C

  • Luminous efficacy: typ. 100 lm/W @ 3000 K, 85 °C

  • Lumen Maintenance: Test results according to IESNA LM-80 available



Osram Joins Cree and Philips Lumileds in "Hot-Binning" with Oslon Square

2013年11月20日星期三

30W Cree XPE2 R3 LED Emitter - white, 10x3w LEDs, 2660LM - US$ 19.99

30W Cree XPE2 R3 LED Emitter
Products Model: BY-XPE2R3-30WH
Key Specs: 30W 10x3w LEDs, 2660LM, White, VF 30 ~ 36 Vdc, IF 1000 mA, Size: 55x40x2mm
Wholesale Price: US$19.99, MOQ: 1 PCS
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Buy 30W White Cree XPE2 R3 LED Emitter on TopLEDlight.com


Ultra Bright 30W Cree XPE2 R3 LED Multichip XP-E2 30 Watt White Light 2660LM New



  • Products Model #: BY-XPE2R3-30WH

  • Manufactured by: TopLedLight

  • Category: Cree XPE/XPG/XTE LED

  • Retail price: US$21.99

  • Wholesale Price: US$19.99

  • MOQ: 1 PCS, In Stock , 500 Units in Stock

  • This item is free shipping



Product Description


30w-cree-xpe2-r3-led-emitter 30w-cree-xpe2-r3-led-emitter[/caption]


Specification



  • Model: Cree XLamp XPE-2 R3

  • Emitted Color: White

  • DC Forward Voltage (VF): 30 ~ 36 Vdc

  • DC Forward Current (IF): 1000 mA

  • Power Output: 30W

  • Intensity Luminous: 2660lm

  • Size: 55x40x2mm


Packing List



  • 1 x 30W Cree XPE2 R3 LED Emitter




30W Cree XPE2 R3 LED Emitter - white, 10x3w LEDs, 2660LM - US$ 19.99

30W Cree XLamp XPE LED Emitter - Yellow

30W Cree XLamp XPE LED Emitter – Yellow
Products Model: BY-XPE-30YL
Key Specs: 10x3w LEDs, Yellow 580nm, VF 30V ~ 36V, IF 350mA ~ 1000mA, Viewing Angle: 110 Degrees, Size: 55x40x2mm


Wholesale Price: US$19.99, MOQ: 1 PCS
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Buy 30W Yellow Cree XLamp XPE LED Emitter on TopLEDlight.com


30W Cree XLamp XPE Multichip LED 30 Watt Yellow Light



  • Products Model #: BY-XPE-30YL

  • Manufactured by: TopLedLight

  • Category: Cree XPE/XPG/XTE LED

  • Retail price: US$21.99

  • Wholesale Price: US$19.99

  • MOQ: 1 PCS, In Stock , 1000 Units in Stock

  • This item is free shipping



Product Description


30w-cree-xlamp-xpe-led-emitter-yellow 30w-cree-xlamp-xpe-led-emitter-yellow[/caption]


Specification



  • Lens Color: Water Clear

  • Emitted Color: Yellow

  • Wavelength: 580nm

  • DC Forward Voltage (VF): 30V ~ 36V

  • DC Forward Current (IF): 350mA ~ 1000mA

  • Viewing Angle: 110 Degrees

  • Size: 55x40x2mm


Packing List



  • 1x 30W XPE YELLOW LED




30W Cree XLamp XPE LED Emitter - Yellow

30W Cree XLamp XPE LED - 10x3w red - US$19.99

30W Cree XLamp XPE LED – 10x3w red LEDs
Products Model: BY-XPE-30RD
Key Specs: 10x3w LEDs, Red, VF 30V ~ 36V, IF 350mA ~ 1000mA, Viewing Angle: 110 Degrees, Size: 55x40x2mm
Wholesale Price: US$19.99, MOQ: 1 PCS
Free Shipping from China


Buy 30W Cree XLamp XPE LED on TopLEDlight.com


30w-cree-xlamp-xpe-led-10x3w 30w-cree-xlamp-xpe-led-10x3w[/caption]


30W Cree XLamp XPE LED – 10x3w red LEDs



  • Products Model #: BY-XPE-30RD

  • Manufactured by: TopLedLight

  • Category: Cree XPE/XPG/XTE LED

  • Retail price: US$21.99

  • Wholesale Price: US$ 19.99

  • MOQ: 1 PCS, In Stock , 1000 Units in Stock

  • This item is Freeshipping



Product Description


Specification



  • Lens Color: Water Clear

  • Emitted Color: Red

  • DC Forward Voltage (VF): 30V ~ 36V

  • DC Forward Current (IF): 350mA ~ 1000mA

  • Viewing Angle: 110 Degrees

  • Size: 55x40x2mm


Packing List



  • 1x 30W Cree XLamp XPE LED – 10x3w red LEDs/li>




30W Cree XLamp XPE LED - 10x3w red - US$19.99

Cree XLamp XP-E2 R3 LED Emitter - USD 1.80

Cree XLamp XP-E2 R3 LED Emitter
Products Model:
Key Specs:
Wholesale Price: US$1.80, MOQ: 10 PCS
Free Shipping from China


Buy this item on TopLEDlight.com


cree-xlamp-xp-e2-r3-led-emitter cree-xlamp-xp-e2-r3-led-emitter[/caption]


Cree XLamp XPE2 XP-E2 R3 White LED 20mm New



  • Products Model #: BY-CRXPE2-WH20

  • Manufactured by: TopLedLight

  • Category: Cree XPE/XPG/XTE LED

  • Retail price: US$2.00

  • Wholesale Price: US$1.80

  • MOQ: 10 PCS, In Stock , 5000 Units in Stock

  • This item is Freeshipping


Specification



  • Model #: Cree XLamp XP-E2 R3

  • Emitted Color: White

  • DC Forward Voltage (VF): 2.9 ~ 3.25 Vdc

  • DC Forward Current (IF): 350 ~ 1000 mA

  • Intensity Luminous: 266lm

  • Viewing Angle: 110°


Packing List



  • 1 X Cree XLamp XP-E2 R3 LED Emitter



Cree XLamp XP-E2 R3 LED Emitter - USD 1.80

Cree XLamp XP-E2 Warm White LED - US$129.99

Cree XLamp XP-E2 Warm White LED
Products Model: BY-CRXPE2-WW
Key Specs: XP-E2, VF 2.9 ~ 3.25 Vdc, IF 350 ~ 1000 mA, 161lm ~ 205lm, Viewing Angle: 110 degree
Wholesale Price: US$129.99, MOQ: 100 PCS
Free Shipping from China


Buy Cree XLamp XP-E2 Warm White LED on TopLEDlight.com


cree-xlamp-xp-e2-warm-white-led cree-xlamp-xp-e2-warm-white-led[/caption]


Cree, Inc. announces commercial availability of XLamp® XP-E2 color LEDs. The new XP-E2 color LEDs deliver up to 88 percent higher maximum light output compared to alternative high-power color LEDs, enabling lighting manufacturers to more cost-effectively address a wide spectrum of applications, such as architectural, vehicle and display lighting.


Cree XLamp XPE2 XP-E2 Warm White LED 205lm New Generation Light



  • Products Model #: BY-CRXPE2-WW

  • Manufactured by: TopLedLight

  • Category: Cree XPE/XPG/XTE LED

  • Retail price: US$139.99

  • Wholesale Price: US$129.99

  • MOQ: 100 PCS, In Stock , 5000 Units in Stock

  • This item is Free shipping


Specification



  • Model #: Cree XLamp XP-E2

  • Emitted Color: Warm White (We also have cool white available for sale)

  • DC Forward Voltage (VF): 2.9 ~ 3.25 Vdc

  • DC Forward Current (IF): 350 ~ 1000 mA

  • Intensity Luminous: 161lm ~ 205lm

  • Viewing Angle: 110°


Packing List



  • 1 x Cree XLamp XP-E2 Warm White LED



Cree XLamp XP-E2 Warm White LED - US$129.99

2013年11月16日星期六

Here Comes Cree: Perspectives on the Future of LED Lighting

“No one is saying LEDs aren’t ready anymore.”


In 2008, after a decade of experimentation and, later, acquisition of a competitor, Cree introduced its first indoor lighting-class LED fixtures.
Cree_Lighting Cree_Lighting[/caption]

Around that time, market growth was modest and lighting companies were just beginning to realize the commercial promise of the technology.


Six years later, Cree has picked up a 10 percent share in the global LED market and is one of the more aggressive cost leaders in the industry. It is part of a growing group of semiconductor companies chipping away at the traditional lighting manufacturers that have dominated the market since the dawn of the incandescent light bulb.


“Around 2007 and 2008, the legacy guys were saying LEDs were coming, but that they were not yet ready. Now, no one is saying LEDs aren’t ready anymore,” said Greg Merritt, vice president of marketing at Cree, in a recent interview. “Every company is scrambling as fast as it can to bring products to market.”


Cree’s first 6-inch, 12-watt downlight released in 2008 cost $100. It now has a 6-inch, 9.5-watt downlight product retailing in Home Depot for less than $20 without rebates.


The company has hit a number of other important milestones recently. In March, it released a 6-watt bright-white LED for under $10; in August, it started selling 25-watt and 42-watt streetlights for $99; and this fall, it unveiled a consumer bulb for $20 ($13 with rebates) with a color rendering index of 93 — coming close to the warm white light of an incandescent bulb and becoming the first company to meet California’s voluntary standard for LED lighting quality.


Of course, other manufacturers — both new players and legacy firms — are aggressively working to drop LED costs as well. Although Cree has a very slight edge in pricing, many are offering similar products at comparable price points.


In an interview earlier this year with GTM, Ed Crawford, CEO of Philips Lighting North America, talked about how increasing fragmentation and pricing pressures are forcing change within the incumbent.


“We have to reinvent ourselves. Because if we didn’t change, we’d really run the risk of being left in the dust. As a lighting company, you need to adapt to these changes now — the business as we’ve known it over the last 100 years won’t be the same in five years,” said Crawford.


So how is a relatively new entrant like Cree thinking about reinventing the lighting market? Greg Merritt provided some insight.


From 2008 to 2011, Cree was focused primarily on performance by dropping wattage, improving light quality and increasing product lifecycles. Today, while performance is still clearly a priority, the company is focused more aggressively on expanding manufacturing volume, reducing material costs and lowering installation costs.


“LEDs have gone from 60 percent to 70 percent of the cost of a lighting fixture to less than half. You now have more costs in other places: metal, wiring and downstream installation,” said Merritt. “Previously it was all about making the LED better, now it’s reducing the cost of the rest of the materials.”


The situation is somewhat analogous to the solar industry, where increased manufacturing volumes forced a strong drop in module prices. Today, modules are no longer the most expensive component of an installed system, and companies are looking to reduce other hardware and soft costs when developing projects.


“We are increasingly focused on the downstream market,” said Merritt. “How do you pull together options, simplify the process, and make LEDs easily consumable for companies that weren’t going to upgrade?”


Merritt pointed to the Department of Energy’s Better Buildings Initiative, which helped set up the infrastructure to find contractors and financing for projects. Although Cree would not want to perform that exact function, Merritt said the company is looking to work with “the people that have the capability to bring that information together and equip them with the tools they need.”


Cree is not unique in thinking about better ways to deploy product downstream. This week, Philips announced a “lighting-as-a-service” model that will allow the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority to install 13,000 LEDs at no upfront cost.


Working with lighting controls companies to integrate occupancy sensors and ambient light sensors with LEDs is also key to moving further downstream. Cree has formed partnerships with Daintree Networks and Lutron for this purpose. This strategy is also not unique to Cree — nearly every major manufacturer has formed similar partnerships to make LEDs smarter and easier to integrate in the commercial sector.


Cree isn’t just competing with the well-established legacy players like GE, Osram and Philips. It is also facing competition from consumer electronics firms like LG and Samsung, as well as a cadre of Chinese companies funded by China’s central government. Although these Chinese companies have yet to present a major threat, the broadening ecosystem of manufacturers puts pressure on a company like Cree to ramp up production — which means the company operates on fairly slim margins.


But Merritt said Cree’s approach is to keep innovating and producing “at a pace [competitors] can’t match.”


“Once you start playing defense, you are doomed,” said Merritt. “As long as you keep going, you’ll stay ahead. You just have to keep playing offense.”


Merritt said the next steps for LED innovation are controllability and building new architectural applications.


Controllability will be addressed through partnerships with providers of commercial intelligent lighting platforms. However, Cree does not yet have a residential product like Philips’ hue bulb, which can be controlled in unique ways by a smartphone.


Architectural applications — building LEDs into ceiling tiles, walls, stairwells, streetlights and parking structures in new ways — are perhaps the biggest source of untapped innovation downstream.


“There is no inherent reason why they should fit the same form as traditional lighting. With LEDs, there’s a lot of stuff you couldn’t do before. People are pretty excited about that,” he said.


Looking at Cree’s position and future strategy for growth, analysts are modestly optimistic about the company.


Even though Cree was able to grow revenue by 24 percent and stay out of debt in the first quarter of its 2014 fiscal year, Cree’s stock dropped 17 percent in late October due to its inability to meet guidance. The firm also said it would be spending more money than expected on marketing its Energy Star light bulb, as well as ramping production of its consumer bulbs in Home Depot stores — a product that offers very slim margins.


However, Daniel Amir, an analyst with Lazard Capital, was positive about Cree’s prospects in a recent research note, saying: “We continue to believe that Cree is poised to benefit from the LED lighting adoption with its vertical strategy and that one should take a multiple-quarter view of its consumer light bulb approach.”


About Cree


Cree-LED-logo Cree-LED-logo[/caption]


Cree, Inc. is a global, industry-leading manufacturer of lighting-class LEDs, LED lighting technologies, and semiconductor solutions for radio frequency (RF) and power applications. Cree is paving the way for the LED lighting revolution by producing long-lasting, energy-efficient LED lighting, rendering traditional technologies obsolete.


Cree’s LED Components and Modules division includes the market’s brightest and most reliable lighting-class LEDs, including the Cree XLamp® LED portfolio. By featuring light that is both efficient and beautiful, Cree LED components and modules offer lighting manufacturers and designers high-performance LEDs and LED modules that lower system cost.


Cree leads the industry in brightness and reliability for power LEDs with its XLamp LED family. Through XLamp LEDs, Cree is enabling the lighting industry with efficient LED light. With the largest family of high-performance, commercially-available LEDs, Cree has the right LED for your design.


Cree LED modules provide a simple solution for lighting designers and manufacturers to adopt best-in-class LED lighting, accelerating time to market and lowering system cost. For more information, visit www.cree.com.



Here Comes Cree: Perspectives on the Future of LED Lighting

2013年11月15日星期五

1000pcs Cree XLamp XP-G XPG R5 Cool White LED - 260 ~ 463lm - US$ 1,449.99

Cree XLamp XP-G XPG R5 Cool White LED
Products Model: XPGWHT-L1-1C0-R5-0-09
Key Specs: 260 ~ 463lm, Cool White, VF 3.2 ~ 3.6 Vdc, IF 350 ~ 1500 mA,
Wholesale Price: US$ 1,449.99, MOQ: 1 PCS
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1000pcs Cree XLamp XP-G XPG R5 Cool White LED Wholesale Free Express Shipping



  • Products Model #: BY-CRXPG-R5

  • Manufactured by: TopLedLight

  • Category: Cree XPE/XPG/XTE LED

  • Retail price: US$1,499.99

  • Wholesale Price:US$ 1,449.99

  • MOQ: 1 PCS, In Stock , 200 Units in Stock

  • This item is free shipping



Product Description


1000-pcs-cree-XLamp XP-G XPG R5-cool-white-led 1000-pcs-cree-XLamp XP-G XPG R5 -cool-white-led[/caption]


Specification



  • Model #: XPGWHT-L1-1C0-R5-0-09

  • Emitted Color: Cool White

  • DC Forward Voltage (VF): 3.2 ~ 3.6 Vdc

  • DC Forward Current (IF): 350 ~ 1500 mA

  • Intensity Luminous: 260 ~ 463lm


Packing List



  • 1000x Cree XPG R5 Cool White led




1000pcs Cree XLamp XP-G XPG R5 Cool White LED - 260 ~ 463lm - US$ 1,449.99

1000pcs Cree XLamp XP-E XPE R2 Cool White LED - 114lm ~ 320lm - US$ 899.99

Cree XLamp XP-E XPE R2 Cool White LED
Products Model: XPEWHT-L1-WG1-R2-0-05
Key Specs: 114lm ~ 320lm, Cool White, 20mm, VF 3.2 ~ 3.6 Vdc, IF 350 ~ 1000 mA,
Wholesale Price: US$899.99, MOQ: 1 PCS
Free Express Shipping from China


Buy this item on TopLEDlight.com



  • Category: Cree XPE/XPG/XTE LED

  • Retail price: US$999.99

  • Wholesale Price: US$ 899.99

  • MOQ: 1 PCS, In Stock , 200 Units in Stock

  • This item is Free Express Shipping



Product Description


1000-pcs-cree-xlamp-xp-e-xpe-r2-cool-white-led 1000-pcs-cree-xlamp-xp-e-xpe-r2-cool-white-led[/caption]


1000-pcs-cree-xlamp-xp-e-xpe-r2-cool-white-led-2 1000-pcs-cree-xlamp-xp-e-xpe-r2-cool-white-led-2[/caption]



Specification



  • Model #:  XPEWHT-L1-WG1-R2-0-05

  • Emitted Color: Cool White

  • Diamter: 20mm

  • DC Forward Voltage (VF): 3.2 ~ 3.6 Vdc

  • DC Forward Current (IF): 350 ~ 1000 mA

  • Intensity Luminous: 114lm ~ 320lm


Packing List



  • 1000x Cree XPE R2 Cool White led




1000pcs Cree XLamp XP-E XPE R2 Cool White LED - 114lm ~ 320lm - US$ 899.99

2013年11月9日星期六

150W CREE XLamp XP-G R5 LED light - 15000 lumen 150 watt 6000K-6500K - US$59.99

150W CREE XLamp XP-G R5 LED light
Products Model: BY-CRXPG150W
Key Specs: 15000 lumens, 150 watt, 6000K-6500K, VF 30V-36Vdc, IF 4.5A
Wholesale Price: US$59.99, MOQ: 1 PCS
Free Shipping from China


Buy 150W CREE XLamp XP-G R5 LED light on TopLEDlight.com


150W Cree XLamp XP-G White 6000K-6500K High Power LED Light XPG 14790LM New



  • Products Model #: BY-CRXPG150W

  • Manufactured by: TopLedLight

  • Category: Cree XPE/XPG/XTE LED

  • Retail price: US$64.99

  • Wholesale Price: US$59.99

  • MOQ: 1 PCS, In Stock , 200 Units in Stock

  • This item is free shipping



150w-cree-xlamp-xp-g-r5-led-light 150w-cree-xlamp-xp-g-r5-led-light[/caption]



Product Description



Specification



  • Power: 150W

  • Chip Model: CREE XLamp XP-G R5

  • Emitted Color: White

  • Color Temperature: 6000K-6500K

  • DC Forward Voltage (VF): 30V-36Vdc

  • DC Forward Current (IF): 4.5A

  • Intensity Luminous: 14790LM

  • Size: (L)82 x (W)66 x (H)3mm



Packing List



  • 150W CREE XLamp XP-G R5 LED light




150W CREE XLamp XP-G R5 LED light - 15000 lumen 150 watt 6000K-6500K - US$59.99

2013年11月3日星期日

Cree XR-E Q5 LED light - 250LM

Cree XR-E Q5 LED light + 5-Mode Power Driver Dimmer
Products Model: BY-CRQ5WH20
Key Specs: LED: 250LM, Emitted Color White, 20mm Diameter, IF 350 ~ 1000 mA, VF 3.4 ~ 4.0 Vdc
Wholesale Price: US$7.99, MOQ: 1 PCS
Free Shipping from China


Buy this item on TopLEDlight.com


Cree XR-E Q5 3W White Led + 5-Mode Power Driver Dimmer



  • Products Model #: BY-CRQ5WH20, BY-DRQ5

  • Manufactured by: TopLedLight

  • Category: LED DIY Items

  • Retail price: US$9.99

  • Wholesale Price: US$7.99

  • MOQ: 1 PCS, In Stock , 98 Units in Stock

  • This item is free shipping


cree-xr-e-q5-LED-light cree-xr-e-q5-LED-light[/caption]




Product Description


This is a brand new High Power Bright Cree XR-E Q5 White Led come with a driver. Ideal for making light sources for flashlight, video camera, fish tank, car, pool and RC Toys.

The LED driver can be built-in on top of the heat-plate to keep the LED cooler and last longer. If installed it with a LED lens, the beam can shoot long! we also have the lens for sale.



Specification for LED



  • LED Emitted Color: White

  • LED Diameter: 20mm

  • DC Forward Voltage (VF): 3.4 ~ 4.0 Vdc

  • DC Forward Current (IF): 350 ~ 1000 mA

  • Intensity Luminous (Iv): 250 ~ 260 LM



Specification for Driver



  • Quantity: 1pc

  • Input Voltage: 3.2V-4.2V

  • Output Voltage: 3.7V

  • Output Current: 700mA

  • Size (diameter): 17mm

  • Dimmer Circuit Board

  • 5 Modes: Low (10%), mid (50%), high (100%), strobe (100%), SOS (100%)


Kind notice: About the driver, the red wire in the picture is positive to connect LED and the black wire in the picture is negative to connect LED. On the back of the driver, there are green circles, the inner circle is positive and the external circle is negative. you can solder two wires there and connect to the 3.7V power source.



Packing List



  • 1x Cree 3W White LED

  • 1x Driver




Cree XR-E Q5 LED light - 250LM

2013年10月31日星期四

Quantum LED Leverages Cree LEDs Commercial Lamp Bulbs

CRS Electronics Inc. (“CRS” or the “Company”), a developer and manufacturer of LED lighting products, today announced they have selected Cree, a market-leading innovator of lighting-class LEDs, to provide the LEDs for their new QuantumLED commercial lamp (bulb) brand. QuantumLED lamps will feature Cree’s latest XP-G2 LED technology.


“We do all of our product development in-house and consistently look to Cree for the latest in LED technology,” said Scott Riesebosch, Chief Technology Officer at CRS Electronics. “As a customer that uses the XP package, we’re excited to be able to extend our product portfolio with the newest XP-G2 LED.”




Cree-XP-G2-LED

Cree-XP-G2-LED





Cree’s XLamp® XP-G2 LED has been employed throughout the QuantumLED directional lamp product portfolio. The initial product offering includes PAR lamps, as well as MR16 lamps in three distinct lumen packages. A family of R and BR reflectorized lamps will also be offered. Directional lamps will be available in multiple beam angles, and all will offer the highest lumen output, efficacies, and color temperature ranges on the market. In addition, QuantumLED will feature an extremely hard-to-find 2200 Kelvin color temperature option throughout its entire product line.

“CRS Electronics’ QuantumLED lamps showcase the advantages of Cree’s XP-G2 LEDs,” said Paul Thieken, Cree Director of Marketing, LED Components. “The XP-G2 LED allows CRS to seamlessly leverage the higher-performance Cree LEDs without making any additional investment.”


About Cree




Cree-LED-logo

Cree-LED-logo





Cree is leading the LED lighting revolution and making energy-wasting traditional lighting technologies obsolete through the use of energy-efficient, mercury-free LED lighting. Cree is a market-leading innovator of lighting-class LEDs, LED lighting, and semiconductor products for power and radio frequency (RF) applications.

Cree’s product families include LED fixtures and bulbs, blue and green LED chips, high-brightness LEDs, lighting-class power LEDs, power-switching devices and RF devices. Cree’s products are driving improvements in applications such as general illumination, electronic signs and signals, power supplies and inverters.


For additional product and Company information, please refer to www.cree.com.


About CRS Electronics




CRS-Electronics-logo

CRS-Electronics-logo





CRS Electronics, Inc. (TSX-V:LED), is a Lighting Facts partner and, for more than 15 years, has been a leader in the emerging, rapidly-growing market of high efficiency LED lighting. In addition to cutting edge R&D, exemplified by numerous patents, CRS Electronics designs and manufactures innovative electronics and LED lighting technologies for major customers, as well as its own product brands. CRS Electronics designs, develops and delivers optimal electronics and LED solutions for a myriad of commercial applications.

Quantum LED Leverages Cree LEDs Commercial Lamp Bulbs

Cree, Philips Lumileds, and Luminus Devices extend COB LED technology

The variety of options in chip-on-board LED arrays continues to expand, both in brighter LEDs with smaller light-emitting surfaces and in larger components with maximum flux output. Luminus Devices, Philips Lumileds, and Cree have all made recent chip-on-board (COB) LED technology announcements that in aggregate span increased lumen output in both small and large LED packages. Cree announced a brighter LED with a 23-mm light-emitting surface (LES) and a new 30-mm part in the CXA family. Lumileds announced a 10% gain in performance across its entire COB line. And Luminus Devices entered the COB segment for the first time with its Xnova family charting a new path to serve general solid-state lighting (SSL) applications.


Cree CXA3590 and CXA3070



cree-cxa3070-LED

cree-cxa3070-LED



Cree has now upgraded its 23-mm family with the CXA3070 LED extending the performance range to 11,000 lm at 85° operating temperature. SSL manufacturers that used the prior CXA3050 LED can drop the new family member into existing designs with little or no change required and deliver higher-performance products. “The high-performance CXA3070 LED array enables us to offer metal-halide replacements that exceed the efficiency and life of the technology they replace,” said David Gershaw, president, RemPhos Technologies LLC. “Cree CXA LED arrays set the industry standard for integrated arrays, providing excellent efficacy, reliability, and light output.” The CXA3590, meanwhile, is Cree’s largest COB LED yet, delivers 16,225 lm, and is designed to replace 250W metal halide (MH) sources. “We are excited that Cree is extending the CXA family because it enables us to address more applications with a single, easy-to-use platform,” said David Lin, general manager, Yah Juang Lighting Technology. “The CXA3590 LEDs allow us to address high-lumen applications with a single LED, a feat which would have taken hundreds of other LEDs to accomplish.”



Lumileds bumps COB performance




philips-lumileds-luxeon-cob-family

philips-lumileds-luxeon-cob-family





Philips Lumileds only entered the COB space back at Lightfair in May offering components with an LES of 9, 13, or 15 mm. “Just one quarter into volume product deliveries, we have increased Luxeon COB performance by +10%, which speaks to the rapid rate at which we upgrade the lumen output and efficacy of our products,” said Eric Senders, product line director at Philips Lumileds. The products now span the range of 1000 to 7000 lm with typical efficacy of 130 lm/W. A 2200-lm 9-mm LED in warm white delivers 2200 lm at 100 lm/W. The company also asserts that its metal-core substrate delivers better thermal performance than competitive products and allows SSL manufacturers to utilize 40% smaller heat sinks.

Luminus enters COB market




luminus-xnova-led-family

luminus-xnova-led-family





Luminus Devices’ entry into the COB arena is somewhat a surprise. The company had previously focused on building larger individual LED die to serve high-lumen-output applications. Indeed, the company contributed a feature article on its round monolithic emitters in March 2013 that essentially questioned the value proposition of COB technology. Luminus has since been acquired by Sanan subsidiary Lightera. The new Xnova LED family is the combined work of Luminus and Lightera, and, according to a company spokesperson, represents “a change in direction for Luminus with regard to general lighting.” Luminus will continue to supply its larger-die LEDs into entertainment, display, medical, ultraviolet (UV), and other specialty applications. The Xnova family is being debuted this week at the Hong Kong Lighting Fair with products spanning the range from 350 to 10,000 lm. Cool white efficacy is 134 lm/W and warm white efficacy is 120 lm/W. CRI ranges from 75 to 95. “The Xnova family enables further adoption of LED technology into mass markets by providing our customers with outstanding technical performance and superior value,” said Decai Sun, chairman and CEO of Luminus. “Leading lighting companies around the globe are already designing their next-generation lighting solutions based on our new technology.”

Cree, Philips Lumileds, and Luminus Devices extend COB LED technology