I was running the voltage at 19.4v (these are Endor rebel stars with a forward voltage of 3.15v. 6 x 3.15v + 0.5v = 19.4v); the thing is that I was only getting 0.4A being pulled from the PSU - in fact you can see the reading on the PSU in the photo in my earlier post ...
So, given that the driver was running cool and that the LEDs weren't *that* bright, coupled with the fact that I trust my bench PSU, I thought I'd up the voltage until the current stayed constant - that happened at 20.7v, with a constant current of 0.82A. That current is pretty much in-line with what I'd expect with a 680R resistor (the datasheet says it ought to be 0.8A).
So, at least with these LEDs, it looks as though the efficiency isn't quite as good as we were thinking ...
<table><tr><td align=right>Total voltage being fed to the circuit = </td><td>20.7</td></tr><tr><td align =right>Total drop voltage over the leds = </td><td>6 x 3.15v = 18.9v</td></tr><tr><td align =right>Voltage consumed by non-LED parts of circuit = </td><td>(20.7 - 18.9) = 1.8v</td></tr><tr><td align =right>Power dissipated by non-LED parts of circuit = </td><td>1.8 x 0.82 = 1.476W</td></tr><tr><td align =right>Power dissipated by LEDs = </td><td>(6 x 3.15 x 0.82) = 15.498W</td></tr><tr><td align =right>Efficiency rating = </td><td>15.498 / (15.498 + 1.476) ≈ 91% efficient</td></tr>
</table>
This assumes the LEDs drop what they say they do, of course. 91% is also still reasonably good when measuring in the real world rather than reading datasheets, at least IMHO. DWZM might disagree [grin].
After 30 mins or so running at this rate, the driver is noticeably warmer to the touch as well, but not hot - I can comfortably hold my finger on the chip, and it only feels warmer-than-my-finger.
Simon