"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
I have a home built unit, I have a Saati led light about 40” below the glass. It’ s not that expensive and is made for the job. I think Saati have 2 units, I have the cheaper one.I would also recommend that you have the rubber seal sitting on the glass, I built it with the seal on the metal frame and this gave me trouble.I had an electronics guy set up two timers so the first one switches on the vacuum for a set time and then the lamp switches on.Good luck, don’t try and save too much, to do good printing you need good screens.
oh, and that LED layout will cause massive hot spots/variations in the light field. The distance between the LEDs has to be the same in all directions. You will need to get strips closer if the spacing on them is represented correctly.pierre
Curious as to what unit your loaner was.
If you proceed with your plan, you may want to consider the following:-- 20 meters probably won't get create a field large enough for exposing 2 screens-- the controller shown has 200 watt max capability and 20 meter of 5050 strip would be 300 watts -- don't use an LED chip smaller than 5050I agree with the other members, who recommend purchasing a used MH unit (especially if you want to have good halftone capability).
Do you have a verified quality LED source? That's the issue I ran into. While getting on Aliexpress and searching for the right wavelength worked ok, the quality of the LED's I received varied wildly. While it did work OK, my led board was exponentially unprepared for thick stencil exposures. I still have it sitting beside my 5k Olec so in the event that the olec goes down, I do have a backup source, but honestly a florescent tube exposure box would be just as good as a back up and cheap and would have saved me hours/days of testing. But it was FUN so I don't regret it. Often times there are much more productive ways to spend our time making MONEY, but really, money ain't the spice of life. Have fun!