Ok, picked up some resistors and in my haste, picked two different sets of 100 Ohm resisitors. One is listed at 1/2 watt at 5% tolerance and the other is 1/4 watt at 5% tolerance.
So my question is how are they different and how would you figure them into being used with leds?
Resistors Difference between 1/2 watt and 1/4 watt?
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What and how many LED's are you using? What are your voltage and current values? The wattage rating of any resistor can be calculated by Ohm's Law. If you are using 12 volts at 20mA, you can calculate the wattage with Power(W)=Current(I)*Voltage(V). Using the values above, 12*.020=.24W. So you are right at your 1/4 watt value. It would be okay to use a 1/4 watt resistor, but I would step up to 1/2 watt to alleviate any heat.
Hope this helps...
Hope this helps...
I am fearful when I see people substituting fear for reason
Scott, my basic question was what is the difference between the two... which I think you answered.
If I understand correctly, what ever the number of leds, etc. what matters is the Heat the resistor will generate.
If I don't care, then using the 1/4 is fine. But it will generate more heat from the resistor.
If heat does matters, then use the 1/2 to keep the resistor cooler.
If I understand correctly, what ever the number of leds, etc. what matters is the Heat the resistor will generate.
If I don't care, then using the 1/4 is fine. But it will generate more heat from the resistor.
If heat does matters, then use the 1/2 to keep the resistor cooler.
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But remember that the voltage that matters in this calculation is the voltage across the resistor.Scott Hasty wrote:What and how many LED's are you using? What are your voltage and current values? The wattage rating of any resistor can be calculated by Ohm's Law. If you are using 12 volts at 20mA, you can calculate the wattage with Power(W)=Current(I)*Voltage(V). Using the values above, 12*.020=.24W. So you are right at your 1/4 watt value. It would be okay to use a 1/4 watt resistor, but I would step up to 1/2 watt to alleviate any heat.
Hope this helps...
So if you had a 12V power source in series with a resistor and then two white LEDs all running at 20mA, you wouldn't be looking at 12V * 20mA, you'd be looking at the voltage drop of the resistor * 20mA... If the LEDs each drop 3V, then it'll be something like 6V across the resistor, with the resistor dissipating a total of 120mW - half the safe maximum for a quarter-Watt resistor.
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The value is the total amount of energy [in watts] the resistor can handle before it fails. Of course, as you have surmised, the energy given off in this case is heat.starmanmm wrote:
If I understand correctly, what ever the number of leds, etc. what matters is the Heat the resistor will generate.
I am fearful when I see people substituting fear for reason
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My solution was a SWAG due to not knowing how he set his circuit is set-up. Your assertion is true for series and parallel circuits (in which you have current drops at each circuit branch).tetsujin wrote:But remember that the voltage that matters in this calculation is the voltage across the resistor.Scott Hasty wrote:What and how many LED's are you using? What are your voltage and current values? The wattage rating of any resistor can be calculated by Ohm's Law. If you are using 12 volts at 20mA, you can calculate the wattage with Power(W)=Current(I)*Voltage(V). Using the values above, 12*.020=.24W. So you are right at your 1/4 watt value. It would be okay to use a 1/4 watt resistor, but I would step up to 1/2 watt to alleviate any heat.
Hope this helps...
So if you had a 12V power source in series with a resistor and then two white LEDs all running at 20mA, you wouldn't be looking at 12V * 20mA, you'd be looking at the voltage drop of the resistor * 20mA... If the LEDs each drop 3V, then it'll be something like 6V across the resistor, with the resistor dissipating a total of 120mW - half the safe maximum for a quarter-Watt resistor.
I am fearful when I see people substituting fear for reason
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If they're White, Green or Bluestarmanmm wrote:Ok, lets take a step back... what applications would one want to use 1/4 over 1/2?
Series or Parallel... pick your set up for.... let's say 3 leds at 20 mA.
3v input - parallel - no resistor
6v input - parallel - 3x 150ohm resistors
9v input - series - no resistor
12v input - series - 1x 150ohm resistor
If they're Red or Yellow
3v input - parallel - 3x56ohm resistors
6v input - series - no resistor
9v input - series - 1x150ohm resistor
12v input - series - 1x330ohm resistor
All arrays use 1/4 watt without a problem
These are using the LED's I get from Unique