Meanwell LDD driver: for those who want to dim to 0 using Arduino

I'm about ready to order everything, but I want to know what watt resistor should I use.
It looks like the those little SMD ones (R1206) are 1/2 watt.

I don't think I can use them because my boards are the original 4up boards that did not have the pulldown resistor incorporated into the design so I need to solder one end of the resistor to the PWM pin first, scrape a small bit of coating off on the other end and then solder it to the ground plane.

Is this the correct resistor to use?
http://www.radioshack.com/product/index.jsp?productId=2062330


That will work. Just solder one end to the PWM pin and the other end to VIn- or ground. They can be soldered to the bottom side of the PcB after you've soldered in the DIL24 chip holders.
 
4 of my LDD-1000 already came soldered to the board so I'm going to have to solder the pulldown resistor to the bottom of the PcB, unless I desolder the drivers and add the DIL24 chip holders
 
That will work. Just solder one end to the PWM pin and the other end to VIn- or ground. They can be soldered to the bottom side of the PcB after you've soldered in the DIL24 chip holders.

Could you just use the screw terminals to connect those thru hole resistors and avoid doing any soldering or board modifications. I think the leads would be long enough? but I don't recall how the terminals were laid out on all the various board versions.
 
Could you just use the screw terminals to connect those thru hole resistors and avoid doing any soldering or board modifications. I think the leads would be long enough? but I don't recall how the terminals were laid out on all the various board versions.

This is the layout for the boards that I got.

attachment.php
 
Could you just use the screw terminals to connect those thru hole resistors and avoid doing any soldering or board modifications. I think the leads would be long enough? but I don't recall how the terminals were laid out on all the various board versions.


Sure- that would work too. You could solder one end of the resistor to the PcB's ground plane and just insert the other end into the PWM screw terminal. Just watch out - that you don't cause a short circuit with the bare leads of the resistor. That could be bad.:headwally:
 
Alternatively, you could connect a resistor (with wire leads) to the backside of the board, between the PWM pin and one of the -In pins for each LDD.
 
You could run a wire, with an appropriate resistor in-line, from each of screw terminals 5, 6, 7 and 8 (on J1) to screw terminal 4 (on J1).

This sounds like an easier option.
Can you use 1 resistor and then have it go to all 4 terminals (5, 6, 7 & 8) or does it still need 4 resistors?
 
This sounds like an easier option.
Can you use 1 resistor and then have it go to all 4 terminals (5, 6, 7 & 8) or does it still need 4 resistors?

If you tied the PWM pins together, you wouldn't be able to separately control the LDDs. You need 4 resistors.
 
Correct. I was testing you. :)

Really, I din't think of that when I typed it I had 3 other people talking to me at work.

Thanks.
 
I am going to be building some new lights soon. roughly 187 leds. mixed of
rb, whte green, purple, red, blue, uv. moon lights.

how many leds can the ldd 1000 750 500 and the 350 handle individually?

Where can I buy the boards I see on here?
 
I am going to be building some new lights soon. roughly 187 leds. mixed of
rb, whte green, purple, red, blue, uv. moon lights.

how many leds can the ldd 1000 750 500 and the 350 handle individually?

Where can I buy the boards I see on here?


All the different LDD-H current models can handle up to 56Vin, but a power supply with a 48V rating (+/-10%) is the closest you'll get to 56V for our purposes. Divide 48V by the Vf of your chosen Led's to determine the number that can be driven in each string.

You can order the boards here- ITEAD Studio - Make innovation easier
Just choose one of the PcB designs and download the attached Gerber file Zip Folder. Go to the Itead website and open the "Open PcB" tab and pick a PcB size option that fits the design that you've chosen and choose from the different PcB options in the drop down lists. Hint- stick with the "free" options and you can't get it wrong. Pay for the service and upload the Gerber files (make sure to rename the gerber files to include your order#)
 
Hey O2,
Do you have the bom that you need to make the 6211 work. I've been watching some eagle how to's and want to put the parts on a schematic. Also where do you find a 6211 in the library? Thanks---Rick
 
Hey O2,
Do you have the bom that you need to make the 6211 work. I've been watching some eagle how to's and want to put the parts on a schematic. Also where do you find a 6211 in the library? Thanks---Rick


007


I've attached a schematic that I drew up, and a copy of the A6211 part library. (I had to create the library from scratch) I just pulled the trigger on a bunch of the parts needed to build a few dozen of these drivers, but I haven't finalized the PcB design yet. I've got two designs, one- with all five drivers on one PcB and another that has the A6211 sharing the same pin out and footprint of an LDD-H. I'll finalize their design and order the PcB's after I have all the parts in hand. Have fun with your EAGLE!
 

Attachments

Thanks O2... I'm really in, learn as you go. I got your schematic to come up, and printed it out so I can do some studying. I'm thinking I want to make new boards, although I have your 5up already. My main thing would be to make a change to led, power, and pwm connections to the boards via headers not screw down connections. I'll be watching for your new 6211 pcb design.---Rick
 
Vf would be 3.0-3.5 which is what the LED can handle.

I am currently running 2.1 ratio of rb and whites total of 96 using meawell 60/48P drivers.

I have more leds that I want to use to replace the current ones they are all cree ( which ones i do not know, but they 1200 mhA max
 
@O2Surplus - got the analog to PWM converter yesterday. Very nice work, everything is so tiny. Did you do this by hand? Impressive if so. Thanks again!

IMG_0815.JPG


Could you give me a quick description of what the 6 terminals (not the screw downs) are for, do some of them allow mini to usb for access to the chip?
 
@O2Surplus - got the analog to PWM converter yesterday. Very nice work, everything is so tiny. Did you do this by hand? Impressive if so. Thanks again!
IMG_0815.JPG


Could you give me a quick description of what the 6 terminals (not the screw downs) are for, do some of them allow mini to usb for access to the chip?

Hey, I'm glad you like it! Yes, it was made by hand. Most of the surface mount components were soldered using hot air, but the Atmega chip and the rest of the through hole components were done with a conventional soldering iron.
The 6 pin connection is used for programming purposes only. You'll need a FTDI/USB adapter to connect the convertor to your PC. You can find the adapter on FleaBay for a few bucks. Typically they look like this-

mnYE7RocNOxGt0pV1vmM5Sw.jpg
 
I just finished up modifying the above 10V Analog/5V PWM dimmer to act as a manual dimmer. This dimmer should work for just about any Led driver that accepts a 5V PWM signal. Now you'll be able to adjust the output current of your LDD's "the old fashioned way", by turning a knob! LOL

Here's a picture of the PcB design-

Manual5VPWMdimmingmodule_zpsfbe0ed88.png


I'll post the build files and software needed- if there's any interest.
 
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