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Drive A 5w Led

Hi!

I bought some 5W cool white leds (http://www.ebay.com/itm/5-10-50-pcs...var=420747181213&_trksid=p2057872.m2749.l2649)

in the specs at ebay says that "Cool White: 4 Chips,Voltage:(6V~7V),Current: 700mA", and since I learnt thay these kind of led needs constant current, I overviewed the voltage rating and I used a 700mA constant current driver (http://www.ebay.com/itm/Sure-Boost-...e=STRK:MEBIDX:IT&_trksid=p2057872.m2749.l2649)

I burnt it. two of them.

What am I doing wrong and how do I correctly drive these leds?

thanks in advance!
 
What heat sink did you use?
It's not clear from the write-up if the 700mA rating for the LED is for some specific set of conditions, e.g. a brief burst of current, continuous current, forced-cooling of the LED, .......
Personally, I would never drive a LED at the stated maximum current. Vendors/manufacturers figures can be a tad optimistic. It's safer to allow a decent margin.
 
The Chinese are horrible at instructions.

I wouldn't trust the specs given. They could mean to use a700ma rated power supply instead of saying it has a forward current of 700ma?

I would apply 6vdc and measure the actual current.

I'm guessing your constant current driver went well above the rated forward voltage of 7 in order to maintain a current of 700ma.
 
As for heatsink I used one of these typical aluminium stars (http://www.ebay.com/itm/50-x-LED-He...530734?hash=item2a6fdf496e:g:26IAAOSwOdpXyabt). @kellys_eye ; unnecessary useless comment...

@Alec_t, thanks for your comment

@Tha fios agaibh, this is indeed probably what happened. As a matter of fact I asked the manufacterer of the 700mA constant current driver, and he answered "It is a boost led driver ,you use 12v to power, the output voltage will be higher than 12V the led (6V~7V) will be burned". I will apply 6vdc and measure current and come back with the results.
 
If you apply 6V you may well burn another one.

LEDs cannot be reliably run from a voltage source, the current would be too varisble. You had the right idea with the constant current source. You just need one that can run in the range of 6 to 7 volts.

And you do need a hear sink if you want to run it at more than about 1 Watt.

Bob
 
thanks bob for sharing your thought!


And about "I'm guessing 'none'....", even if it is an accurate observation, it plays no role in trying to help the community finding solutions.
 
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