SunPower LED · Red light therapy panel
Mini-Canopy
A portable red and near-infrared photobiomodulation panel (660nm + 810nm) for treating larger body areas in short sessions, at home or in a clinical setting.
Key features
- 310 total LEDs (160 red at 660nm, 150 NIR at 810nm)
- Panel size: 12" x 8.5" (620 cm²)
- Output power: 63 W red, 60 W NIR at full power
- Irradiance: 102 mW/cm² red, 100 mW/cm² NIR
- Fluence: 6 J/cm² in 60 seconds
- Optional 1050nm upgrade (+$1,500); 2-year warranty
How Mini-Canopy is used in recovery
The modalities this equipment supports. Tap any for the full guide — the science, who it's for, and verified studios that run it.
Related equipment
Targeted red light deviceSunPower LED
Transcranial PBM Helmet
A transcranial photobiomodulation (tPBM) helmet built from 10 Palm handheld units, delivering 660nm red and near-infrared light across the head; ships with a floor stand.
SunPower LED
Stand Adapter
An adapter for mounting SunPower Palm handheld devices on a stand.
SunPower LED
Extra Cord Extenders
Additional cord extenders for SunPower devices.
Targeted handheld red light deviceSunPower LED
Palm Professional
A handheld photobiomodulation device with switchable 660nm red and 810nm near-infrared wavelengths, sized for targeting individual joints and muscle groups at home or in a studio.
Targeted handheld red light deviceSunPower LED
Palm Ultimate
The same 660nm and 810nm wavelengths as the Palm Professional with about 25% more optical power, for faster sessions over deeper or larger areas.
Targeted handheld red light deviceSunPower LED
SuperPalm 1050
SunPower's newest handheld model, adding a 1050nm near-infrared wavelength for deeper tissue penetration — aimed at larger joints like the hips and deep back muscles.
For equipment makers
Are you SunPower LED?
Claim your brand page on Praxium, manage your product listings, and reach the studios and buyers searching for red light therapy panel.
Not sure which protocol is right for you?
Take the 60-second Protocol Match and get a goal-based recovery plan — which modality, in what order, how often.