Hello all,
First of all I'd like to say hi as this is my first post (go easy on me please...) and secondly that I have read the LED sticky and need some more application-specific info.
I've been scratching my head for a while on this one and thought it was time I could use some help. I want to convert my bike's blinkers, tail lamp, stop lamp, and front position lights to LEDs to save wattage I'll need for other accessories (don't ask...
).
I have bought 250 white diffused LEDs and have begun with making up a blinker. This panel (which will be housed later) is made out of veroboard with an array of 24 LEDs (arranged in a 6 x 4 rectangle approx 1.5" x 2.5"). They are wired in the following way: 3 LEDs in series x 8 in parallel (hope that makes sense). I have not used any resistors at all yet because I'm not sure how to proceed in the most efficient way of powering it:
The problem is the unstable voltage source of my bike, measured to be as low as 10 V on a cold winter morning and as high as 15V at full throttle on a summer's day
. Now I understand LEDs need a constant current source, and I've experimented with a variable voltage supply and a calibrated current meter and have found that 120 mA is the target current I want the array to run at - not pushing them, but making them pretty bright. I've even played around with a LM317 wired in line in the constant current configuration and using a 30 ohm feedback resistor to some degree of success. The only problem is, that the LM317 may be good at providing approximately the correct constant current at a constant 12 V input - but if I vary the input voltage between 10 and 15 V, the current drawn by my array swings between 45 mA and 150 mA respectively. Not good!
My question to you is this: will I have to use both a 12 V regulator (e.g. LM 7812) in line with an LM317 constant current source to do this for each blinker? Or is there a simpler way that I'm not yet seeing?
Thanks for your replies. And yes, I understand I'll need to make another flasher unit - I know about the loading theories etc - maybe this will be a future post...
First of all I'd like to say hi as this is my first post (go easy on me please...) and secondly that I have read the LED sticky and need some more application-specific info.
I've been scratching my head for a while on this one and thought it was time I could use some help. I want to convert my bike's blinkers, tail lamp, stop lamp, and front position lights to LEDs to save wattage I'll need for other accessories (don't ask...
I have bought 250 white diffused LEDs and have begun with making up a blinker. This panel (which will be housed later) is made out of veroboard with an array of 24 LEDs (arranged in a 6 x 4 rectangle approx 1.5" x 2.5"). They are wired in the following way: 3 LEDs in series x 8 in parallel (hope that makes sense). I have not used any resistors at all yet because I'm not sure how to proceed in the most efficient way of powering it:
The problem is the unstable voltage source of my bike, measured to be as low as 10 V on a cold winter morning and as high as 15V at full throttle on a summer's day
My question to you is this: will I have to use both a 12 V regulator (e.g. LM 7812) in line with an LM317 constant current source to do this for each blinker? Or is there a simpler way that I'm not yet seeing?
Thanks for your replies. And yes, I understand I'll need to make another flasher unit - I know about the loading theories etc - maybe this will be a future post...