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It is currently 19 May 2012, 17:55
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davidt
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 LED voltage
Two questions really:
1: I have some old LED's but don't know what the forward voltage or current is for any of them. Is there anyway of finding out ?
2: If I have some LED's with a Vf of 3.4V and If of 30mA could I wire 94 of them in series and connect to mains AC supply of 230V with no limiting resistor. I have suggested 94 because this is 320 divided by 3.4 ( where 320 is the peak V for 230V RMS).
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| 17 Mar 2008, 14:46 |
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John
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 Re: LED voltage
On Wed, 23 Jan 2008 11:20:16 -0800 (PST), davidt <dav1d@talktalk.net> wrote:
>Two questions really: > >1: I have some old LED's but don't know what the forward voltage or >current is for any of them. Is there anyway of finding out ?
--- Yes. View in Courier:
+5V>--> | | S1 O | +-----+ R1| | [5000]<--+ | +----<<---+ |A |+ [VOLTMETER] [LED] | | +<---<<---+ | [AMMETER] | GND>----+ 1. Open S1 2. Crank R1 to maximum R 3. Connect the LED 4 Close S1 5. Rotate R1 until the ammeter reads 20mA 6. Read the voltmeter
This assumes that since they're old LEDs they're rated for 20mA. You may have some high-efficiency LEDs in there, in which case they'll be rated for 2mA, so watch the brightness as you crank the pot since the high-efficiency LEDs will get more or less as bright with 2mA through them as the "standard" ones will with 20 mA through them. ---
>2: If I have some LED's with a Vf of 3.4V and If of 30mA could I wire >94 of them in series and connect to mains AC supply of 230V with no >limiting resistor.
--- Yes, of course you _could_, but it's not a good idea. LEDs want to be driven by a constant current and, being diodes, they have a very sharp If VS Vf knee and will exhibit a very large change in forward current for a very small change in forward voltage once the knee has been crossed.
What I'd do would be to assume that all the LEDs were sitting at worst case Vf low, that mains could rise to nominal +10%, and figure the length of the string and the value of the current limiting resistor from that.
Also, in order to eliminate flicker and to keep from reverse-voltage stressing the LEDs, I'd full-wave rectify the mains and drive the LEDs from the output of the bridge.
JF
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| 17 Mar 2008, 14:46 |
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davidt
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 Re: LED voltage
Thanks JF
Great answer to both Qs, much appreciated.
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| 17 Mar 2008, 14:46 |
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