grizedale
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Hello,My company has been putting 1A power LEDs from Cree and Osram in parallel for soome time now.
We only ever use a single current source, and NEVER use series current equalisation resistors or current mirrors.
We have encountered no problems......
On our production line, each finished product gets left ON for 20 minutes before being bagged and despatched..........if a failure was going to occur, it would occur there...but it never has, so we are thinking of doing away with this mini soak test.
I think LEDs in parallel is out of the question.
I dont understand anyone who wants to take the risk of paralleling LEDs.......
Parallel LEDs are for Engineers who do not know how to design step-up type SMPS LED drivers.
By the way, i worked for Tridonic in Dornbirn as well as several other LED light companies...putting LEDs in parallel (with no form of current equalisation) is a TABOO subject !!
You said it yourself right here:In what paragraph of which post did Sunnyskyguy convince you that standard LEDs could be paralleled without any current equalisation?
So you agree that it is possible to operate LEDs in parallel successfully. The only remaining questions are "Who is able to do that?" and "How much does it cost?".We all know that LEDs in parallel without equalisation is ok if you pay the LED foundry a fortune to make up paralleled LED modules like that.....
Sunnyskyguy claims a reason for his success is that manufacturers have made improvements in V/I deviations, over a single production run
There are a couple of issues here.......You cannot get any statistical info on Vf variations in a batch from any LED foundry.
It seems TI has figured out what I have in choosing a working matrix that leads towards electro-thermal stability, which is what I have been doing for years.
Yes, but I don't expect that TI claims a particular matching performance for the cicruit. It will be most likely sufficient for general lighting/signalling applications, but won't hardly achieve a matching in a 3-5% range, as required by the original poster, even with a forward voltage bin sorting offered by some manufacturers.It appears to be an unembellished boost converter.
Along the lines of post #49 (Godfrey1) could there be a possibility that your vendor has an automatic testing apparatus in the factory, which tests a reel of led's, one at at time, and marks the ones that meet your V/I spec?
But what if you buy a batch of 1000, measure them, and find they all match to within 2%? You may start getting cautiously optimistic.
It was a hypothetical example. I did not suggest you would be happy with Vf matched to 2%.Sorry but i wouldnt be too pleased with 2%....
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