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6 X 32V LEDs in Series

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devilfrmheaven

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Hi All,

I am planning to build a light with 10 Watt LEDs. These LEDs work on 32 V.

What do you think of connecting 6 or 7 of them in series and power it with 220 V Ac?


Regards,
Devil
 

Hi All,

I am planning to build a light with 10 Watt LEDs. These LEDs work on 32 V.

What do you think of connecting 6 or 7 of them in series and power it with 220 V Ac?


Regards,
Devil
32X7=224
Use 4 of those leds.
 

Hi,

how do you want to limit the current?


* resistor (high power loss, flickering with 100 Hz, low effort)
* current limiter circuit (medium power loss, flickering with 100Hz, medium effort)
* switched mode (low power loss, no flickering, high effort)...

Klaus
 

32X7=224
Use 4 of those leds.

Let me try it out... will keep you posted... :)




The LED according to the datasheet requires 600ma per piece... i thought of putting 6 LEDs in series and 2 100E resistor 20W in parallel
 
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Let me try it out... will keep you posted... :)




The LED according to the datasheet requires 600ma per piece... i thought of putting 6 LEDs in series and 2 100E resistor 20W in parallel

woops.
i meant 7. not 4.
 

A simulation shows you can string together 8 led's (at 32V each). The dropping resistor can be 50 or 60 ohms.

Since they light for a brief part of the cycle, and since they are rated at 600 mA, I arbitrarily adjusted peak current to twice that amount. I cannot say whether your led's are able to tolerate these peaks.

Notice the resistor must endure 84W peak. It drops 71V peak.

9211574600_1402265030.png


You may consider using capacitive drop to reduce current. However 600mA is a high amount for this method, and many would advise against it. You could arrange two led strings in opposing directions.
 

Hi,

many LEDs are powered this way.
Personally i don´t like this because of the 50Hz flickering.
If you don´t move you don´t recognize the flicker, but if you or your eyes move you recognize it.
Maybe i´m a bit allergic to this flicker, because it is very inconvenient for mo to drive behind a car with that low frequency flickering LED rear lights.

The arrange in opposite direction improves the frequency to 100Hz.

*******
If i remembering right in former times it was no good idea to install a flickering neon lamp on a lathe because of the strobe effect the workpiece seemd to be moving "undangerous" slowly....


Klaus
 

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