xandrew245x
New member
I prefer the deep blue look, also I will be able to control how bright each color is, would only 12 whites be enough though?
I ordered my leds, I chose a 2:1 ratio, and threw in a few normal blues as well, I'm going to try wiring them in parallel, and i'm going to use resistors as insurance in case one led were to go out.
Also, I plan on adding a splash guard to my light, how far does it need to be from the leds? I was planning on bolting a piece of acrylic onto the bottom of my frame, which would leave about a quarter of an inch of airspace in between.
Its going to be a quarter inch from the face of the optic, and I meant to say fuses not resistors (smacks head)
I did a good bit of reading on parallel, and I think I understand it for the most part now, however i'm still not to clear on how many leds can go to a driver in parallel.
I have 4 drivers, and what I would really like to do is have the 8 cool whites on a driver and the 8 neutral on a driver, I would wire these in series, since there isn't much need or parallel there, however I would like to use the last 2 drivers for the 34 blues I have, of course wiring in parallel.
There is also a 48 LED kit on ebay that I am considering as well. However, I think I love the neutral and warm whites (at the least, I can say that I HATE the look of cool white LED Christmas lights on a house, haha) and I would personally like a blend of the warmer tones.
Give a look-see and tell me what you think! Thanks.
Tell you what I think? Those LEDs are worthless garbage.You'd be much better off spending the same amount on something known-good.
Basically, when you go parallel, there are a few guidelines to help with design:
1) Each parallel string MUST be the same as all the others on that driver. You can't have one string with 10 of LED A, and another with 10 of LED B. You COULD have two identical strings, each with 5 of each LED, though.
2) On a given driver, each (identical) string must fall within the driver's voltage range. If you have a driver capable of 24 - 48v, you can't have a bunch of strings that only need 20 v. Think of it this way - from a "number of LEDs" standpoint, each string should be as long as if you were only running one string. So if you had a driver that normally took 10 - 12 LEDs, you need parallel strings with 10 - 12 LEDs. You can't put a bunch of strings on it that are only 9 LEDs.
(To be totally accurate, it's not the number of LEDs that matters, it's the Vf of the strings).
3) Assuming the above are followed, the current generated by the driver will be split equally among the strings. So if you have 2A and 4 strings, each will get 500mA. If you have 1A and 10 strings, each gets 100mA. And so on.
I've lost track of which LEDs and which drivers you're talking about in this thread, so as you're thinking about your design, keep these guidelines in mind. Or repost the models of LED, their Vfs, and the models of driver.
I have a feeling this is going to be difficult...
You said about the way i'm wiring my whites, it will be a low current, do you think maybe I should order two more whites, and another driver and just run them in series so I can get the most current running through?