What are the specs for Christmas light LED's?

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Jay.Blanchard
Posts: 46
Joined: Mon Feb 17, 2014 10:44 pm

What are the specs for Christmas light LED's?

Post by Jay.Blanchard »

Let's say I want to break up a Christmas tree light set to use the LED's. How do I calculate the specs so that I know which resistor to use?
greasyspoon
Posts: 203
Joined: Fri Feb 01, 2008 11:57 am
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Post by greasyspoon »

I have never used LED I want and I did some research. Here are some things from post I have found. I can't answer questions but maybe this will help. I can't give credit either I have no idea where I found the info.


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YELLOW, AMBER, RED, most GREEN LEDs tend to operate best at between 1.8 and 2.4 volts.
WHITE, some GREEN, most BLUE LEDs are happiest at between 3.4 and 3.6 volts.

So, take your 6 volts supply voltage, subtract the operating voltage of your LED, allow 0.020 amps for the LED and apply Ohm's law.
6 - 3.4 = 2.6 volts to be 'dropped'.
E=IR or R=E/I or R = 2.6 / .020
or = 130 ohms or a bit more.
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If that PS can't be switched between it's two output voltages, dump it and use either a battery pack or get a new wall-wart.

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I will be using a 9v battery to power them
Ok

R=(9-3.5)/.02 = 275 or 290 ohm - I think that's the next standard - don't have my list in front of me

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Oh, BTW, I'd use a AA pack rather than a 9v battery to power that thing

9v Batteries have a much shorter lifespan compared to a AA or even a AAA pack

Typical 9v rechargable has less than 200 MA - that's 10 hour lifespan for 1 LED
Typical AA rechargable has 2000MA or more - that's 100 hour lifespan for 1 LED

I always use AA rechargables for lighting when I don't use a Wall-wart - you can get packs that hold 2,3,4, or 6 batteries

I'd use the 3 pack for that application and that would work out to be

R=(4.5-3.5)/.02 = 50 or 62 ohm for your standard resistor
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>Bulb type 3.5v/0.07W
>It then says that the transformer supplied is 24v/10.8V output (dont know if that makes any difference )

Well, lets break it down
W=V*A
A=W/V
So .07/3.5 = .02 or 20ma - which is normal for a LED
So to calc the resistance needed for the power supply -> LED

R=(V1-V2)/A
R=(24-3.5)/.02 = 1025 or a 1.2k resistor
R=(10.8-3.5)/.02 = 365 or a 370 ohm resistor

So depending on what your PS is switched to - I hope there's a switch to control the output - you'll need either a 1.2k or a 370 ohm resistor - always go UP in ohm from the calculated to the next available standard

I've gone and hung a meter on the Forever Bright and Phillips LEDs from Christmas light strings and figured the voltage from the resistance necessary to drive the LEDs at 20 mA ( 0.020 Amps ).

Results:
BLUE LEDs (both) - 3.6 Volts at 20 mA
WHITE LEDs (both) - 3.6 Volts at 20 mA
GREEN LEDs (Forever) - 3.6 Volts at 20 mA
RED LEDs (Forever) - 2.8 Volts at 20 mA
ORANGE LEDs (Forever) - 2.8 Volts at 20 mA
YELLOW LEDs (Forever) - 2.8 Volts at 20 mA
Jay.Blanchard
Posts: 46
Joined: Mon Feb 17, 2014 10:44 pm

Post by Jay.Blanchard »

Thanks for the info!
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