Wow John, sounds like you've had quite the adventure with LEDs, not your fault as you say!xmexclusive wrote: I have some experience of multicolour LED strings.
Not my fault at all.
A year or so ago my youngest daughter decided to install a cinema room in her house.
The large room had no windows so lacked direct outside light.
Seemed a sensible thing to do.
Projector on one wall with the opposite wall painted as a 4m by 3m screen.
She had previously got her electrician to install LED spotlights, many with dimmers in all the other rooms.
These were playing up and those on dimmers failing.
Time and cost of free replacement was causing some friction.
When she presented the electrician with the low voltage multicolour LED chain strips for the cinema room he quit.
As all the mains wiring was competed we experimented with the LED strings run off a fused mains plug.
It was not easy positioning the LED strings to get the illumination as she wanted.
We ended up having to reflect the lights off the white ceiling.
The LED string had to be dead flat as a few degrees off and you got colour variation on those LED's.
Really noticeable on white and enough to annoy on other colours.
The results from 25 metres of multicolour LED strip are absolutely stunning.
Dimming is superb, she can set the ceiling to any colour, and running the coloured light patterns is time to leave.
The first control module failed after a few months (internal fault) but the exchange replacement is fine.
Why did the electrician quit when presented with the colour strips? Was he worried about failure and replacement after the problem with the dimmers?
The effects are fantastic I'm sure, worth the effort.
Do you think the dimmers are inherently doomed to failure?
Would be very interested in seeing the results of this John, and that's a good point about the pulse rate, it may well be operating faster than the eye can see but that's not a good thing in all cases.xmexclusive wrote: All this is 12v stuff and I have a spare controller and a some off cuts of LED strips somewhere.
Will try some experiments when I find them.
Simpler controllers, single colour (R, G or B) and white LED strips are available.
Need to check on how it was wired and run as I think constant voltage and constant current were both critical.
Car battery supply might need conditioning circuitry to provide that.
Multicolour needs 3 separate power feeds for each colour but a single earth.
Dimming I assume is pulsed voltage to always give 12 volts when on.
If so LED bulbs flashing on and off at a rate higher than the eye can see may not be ideal for a driver.
Not visible to the eye does not mean the brain cannot see it.
Surprisingly using this kit for car applications never crossed my mind.
John
Interestingly with the Christmas lights I saw, as well as doing the usual flashing patterns, one particular sequence faded them from bright to dim, and back again. This made me wonder if they have any tolerance for voltage variance, I.e will they fail to illuminate at all if they don't have the full 12v...
Ciarán