I remember reading, quite some time ago, an article here on SSM about how to properly strip the LEDs out of a string of Christmas lights and what resistors were best to use with them. My wife, wonderful woman that she is, came home with a string of LED Christmas lights she found on sale quite awhile ago for me to use for just this purpose and I'm finally on a project to use them.
And now I can't find the "how to" article I remember. Can anyone help me out on this? A simple link to that article (if it still exsists) would be great as would a quick paragraph just telling me what to do.
Thanks.
-Chad
Stripping LEDs from Christmas lights
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Stripping LEDs from Christmas lights
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Here is the one I did on BHP on how to clear out the phillips LED Christmas lights. Hope this helps
http://www.blockheadpictures.com/phillipsleds.html
http://www.blockheadpictures.com/phillipsleds.html
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YELLOW, AMBER, RED, most GREEN LEDs tend to operate best at between 1.8 and 2.4 volts.
WHITE, some GREEN, most BLUE LEDs are happiest at between 3.4 and 3.6 volts.
So, take your 6 volts supply voltage, subtract the operating voltage of your LED, allow 0.020 amps for the LED and apply Ohm's law.
6 - 3.4 = 2.6 volts to be 'dropped'.
E=IR or R=E/I or R = 2.6 / .020
or = 130 ohms or a bit more.
Etc.
Hope I'm not being clear as MUDD, even though he was a favorite Trek character of mine.
WHITE, some GREEN, most BLUE LEDs are happiest at between 3.4 and 3.6 volts.
So, take your 6 volts supply voltage, subtract the operating voltage of your LED, allow 0.020 amps for the LED and apply Ohm's law.
6 - 3.4 = 2.6 volts to be 'dropped'.
E=IR or R=E/I or R = 2.6 / .020
or = 130 ohms or a bit more.
Etc.
Hope I'm not being clear as MUDD, even though he was a favorite Trek character of mine.
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Cool. Thanks for doing the math for me.en'til Zog wrote:YELLOW, AMBER, RED, most GREEN LEDs tend to operate best at between 1.8 and 2.4 volts.
WHITE, some GREEN, most BLUE LEDs are happiest at between 3.4 and 3.6 volts.
So, take your 6 volts supply voltage, subtract the operating voltage of your LED, allow 0.020 amps for the LED and apply Ohm's law.
6 - 3.4 = 2.6 volts to be 'dropped'.
E=IR or R=E/I or R = 2.6 / .020
or = 130 ohms or a bit more.
Etc.
Hope I'm not being clear as MUDD, even though he was a favorite Trek character of mine.
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