B
Bughunter
The recent discussion about LED lighting included a couple comments on the
appropriateness of LEDS for night lights. I thought it was an idea worthy of
it's own thread.
My off grid home is in the stage of construction where the interior walls
are still open accessible to add wiring runs. So, now is an opportune time
for me to add wiring to the whole house. So far, I have not installed any
low voltage wiring runs, just the 115vac wring typical of a standard US
home.
I have been casually thinking about adding a dedicated low voltage DC
circuit to support some LED night lights as a simple aid to night
navigation. I have a few ideas, but have not made any decisions yet. Maybe I
can get some ideas here to influence me in one direction or another.
I'm interested in ideas on how I might set up LED night lights throughout
the house.
Right now, I use a few glass enclosed tea candles for night lights which is
romantic, but a little too 19th century. I want something that looks
professional, and not homemade.
My inverter runs in sleep mode at night, so I'd prefer a solution that does
not require 115vac except perhaps for periodic (and hopefully infrequent)
manual battery recharging.
I wonder if it would make sense to power the LED night lights from my main
48v battery bank, or to use a separate dedicated bank, and maybe at a
different voltage?
My main bank runs at 48v. I suppose it would be easy enough to run a
dedicated, fused, 48v wiring run..With a 48v run, I would not have as much
voltage drop across the wire and could use smaller gauge wire. But, would I
be just burning it off in resistors required to drop the voltage to that
required by the LEDs?
Alternatively, I could setup a separate 6v (or 12v) deep cycle golf cart
battery. This would require periodic recharging, probably with an
inexpensive automotive charger plugged into my 110vac. I'd almost prefer not
to go this route, because it adds one more thing separate subsystem to have
to monitor and maintain. On the other hand, if it were 12v, then I might
find it useful for other non-nightlight applications such as recharging my
cell phone where 12v is the more common voltage. DC to DC converters are
somewhat pricey, but I suppose for one or two low draw outlets it is a
possibility.
I am thinking that a single switch per floor would be adequate for my place.
I wonder if I could just use a normal 110vac light switch for 48VDC, or I
would need a DC rated switch?
It would be nice if I could use some small gauge wire, like Cat5, or door
bell wire. Each wire run might be in the range of 100 feet per floor.
My place is 2200 square feet, on two floors. I think 6 to 8 night-lights
fixtures per floor would provide adequate night lighting.
Is a single led per fixture adequate? Color?
Are there any off the shelf low voltage DC fixtures that might be
applicable. I don't want to reinvent the wheel if an off the shelf solution
exists, as long as it is no too expensive.
I wonder what kind of fixture could be made that would be simple to
construct, yet
not look homemade. One thought is to use a single outlet type mounting box,
and use a blank switch plate mount a led. Maybe more than one led per plate?
Ideas? Experiences? Links? Calculations?
appropriateness of LEDS for night lights. I thought it was an idea worthy of
it's own thread.
My off grid home is in the stage of construction where the interior walls
are still open accessible to add wiring runs. So, now is an opportune time
for me to add wiring to the whole house. So far, I have not installed any
low voltage wiring runs, just the 115vac wring typical of a standard US
home.
I have been casually thinking about adding a dedicated low voltage DC
circuit to support some LED night lights as a simple aid to night
navigation. I have a few ideas, but have not made any decisions yet. Maybe I
can get some ideas here to influence me in one direction or another.
I'm interested in ideas on how I might set up LED night lights throughout
the house.
Right now, I use a few glass enclosed tea candles for night lights which is
romantic, but a little too 19th century. I want something that looks
professional, and not homemade.
My inverter runs in sleep mode at night, so I'd prefer a solution that does
not require 115vac except perhaps for periodic (and hopefully infrequent)
manual battery recharging.
I wonder if it would make sense to power the LED night lights from my main
48v battery bank, or to use a separate dedicated bank, and maybe at a
different voltage?
My main bank runs at 48v. I suppose it would be easy enough to run a
dedicated, fused, 48v wiring run..With a 48v run, I would not have as much
voltage drop across the wire and could use smaller gauge wire. But, would I
be just burning it off in resistors required to drop the voltage to that
required by the LEDs?
Alternatively, I could setup a separate 6v (or 12v) deep cycle golf cart
battery. This would require periodic recharging, probably with an
inexpensive automotive charger plugged into my 110vac. I'd almost prefer not
to go this route, because it adds one more thing separate subsystem to have
to monitor and maintain. On the other hand, if it were 12v, then I might
find it useful for other non-nightlight applications such as recharging my
cell phone where 12v is the more common voltage. DC to DC converters are
somewhat pricey, but I suppose for one or two low draw outlets it is a
possibility.
I am thinking that a single switch per floor would be adequate for my place.
I wonder if I could just use a normal 110vac light switch for 48VDC, or I
would need a DC rated switch?
It would be nice if I could use some small gauge wire, like Cat5, or door
bell wire. Each wire run might be in the range of 100 feet per floor.
My place is 2200 square feet, on two floors. I think 6 to 8 night-lights
fixtures per floor would provide adequate night lighting.
Is a single led per fixture adequate? Color?
Are there any off the shelf low voltage DC fixtures that might be
applicable. I don't want to reinvent the wheel if an off the shelf solution
exists, as long as it is no too expensive.
I wonder what kind of fixture could be made that would be simple to
construct, yet
not look homemade. One thought is to use a single outlet type mounting box,
and use a blank switch plate mount a led. Maybe more than one led per plate?
Ideas? Experiences? Links? Calculations?