Hi, I am currently studying microelectronics at university and i have to say that the amount of useful information in your videos are beyond university lessons. Thanks a lot and dont give up your videos are awesome
The thing about dimming LEDs with current is that I believe the light spectrum can vary a lot when the current changes - with PWM it should stay much more consistent especially at lower luminosity. Also, if using LED strips, I believe PWM is the only practical way to vary the light, because the way they are constructed
Honestly, not sure about which affects the linearity more (PWM vs CC). I do know that if the exact brightness is important, it's critical to calibrate it and use a lookup table or algorithm to control it.
Excellent video Kyle. when working on LED drivers for your projects, do you take into consideration the flux and voltage binning of the LEDs as well as color wavelengths? Thank you.
Oh boy, that's a question! So yes, they absolutely matter. Every project I've been on like this, the client will spec them for us. Since we don't have any LED flux testers, I don't know that process too well. But typically you can only bin 2 out of the 3 specs. So you'll want to use a constant current driver rather than relying on a fixed forward voltage
Commonly the light engines will have binning resistors to adjust current as well as thermal fold back NTCs. Many drivers have an analog range for the dim/PWM pin usually around 0.5v-2.5v. a voltage divider can then be as simple as a 100k ntc on the bottom to ground and a current adjust resistor on the top. That's all separate from the main current sense resistor.
hi, please revert back ASAP since its very imp for me to know. I am using 3x10 cob led along with cc driver that is 960mA,30-35v and the connection type is series-parallel, now the issue is if one of my string fails so will it add up to the remaining LED or no??? I made some calculations too: 1 led = 30/10 = 3V 1 led current rating = 960mA/10 = 96mA so single led is taking 3v and 96mA for 1 string: 3x10= 30V, 96x10= 960mA this is for 1 string, i am extremely confused if the CC driver rating is only for one string or what please help i don't want it to override other strings.
I totally subscribed to Your channel. They're right ▶️ don't You ever give up man. I'm 34 and God damn I stand no chance to ever be this clever. I will tell about that channel to my friends interested in electronics.
Hi, I am currently studying microelectronics at university and i have to say that the amount of useful information in your videos are beyond university lessons. Thanks a lot and dont give up your videos are awesome
Great to hear!
Can only agree.
thank for this convincing and interisting video. Really appreciate it.
This is so thorough! Thanks a lot!
The thing about dimming LEDs with current is that I believe the light spectrum can vary a lot when the current changes - with PWM it should stay much more consistent especially at lower luminosity.
Also, if using LED strips, I believe PWM is the only practical way to vary the light, because the way they are constructed
Honestly, not sure about which affects the linearity more (PWM vs CC). I do know that if the exact brightness is important, it's critical to calibrate it and use a lookup table or algorithm to control it.
Thanks for the insights. Your videos are very knowledgeable. Very practical oriented instead of only theoritical(not useful).
Hi, thanks for the very informative video! What are some pointers when it comes to UL certification?
Hi this is a nice video. I wonder if there is source schematic file provided? A lot of contents in ur videos but they are too small to be seen
Excellent video Kyle.
when working on LED drivers for your projects, do you take into consideration the flux and voltage binning of the LEDs as well as color wavelengths? Thank you.
Oh boy, that's a question! So yes, they absolutely matter. Every project I've been on like this, the client will spec them for us. Since we don't have any LED flux testers, I don't know that process too well. But typically you can only bin 2 out of the 3 specs. So you'll want to use a constant current driver rather than relying on a fixed forward voltage
Commonly the light engines will have binning resistors to adjust current as well as thermal fold back NTCs. Many drivers have an analog range for the dim/PWM pin usually around 0.5v-2.5v. a voltage divider can then be as simple as a 100k ntc on the bottom to ground and a current adjust resistor on the top. That's all separate from the main current sense resistor.
Can you do a video on 100w led street light led driver design?
hi, please revert back ASAP since its very imp for me to know. I am using 3x10 cob led along with cc driver that is 960mA,30-35v and the connection type is series-parallel, now the issue is if one of my string fails so will it add up to the remaining LED or no???
I made some calculations too: 1 led = 30/10 = 3V 1 led current rating = 960mA/10 = 96mA so single led is taking 3v and 96mA
for 1 string:
3x10= 30V, 96x10= 960mA
this is for 1 string, i am extremely confused if the CC driver rating is only for one string or what please help i don't want it to override other strings.
Nice video man.
Thanks for the visit!
Hey what software are you using here ; is that tinker CAD ?
KiCad!
Nice video i like your channel bro keep up more videos pls
Thanks! Yes, I will be soon!
I totally subscribed to Your channel. They're right ▶️ don't You ever give up man. I'm 34 and God damn I stand no chance to ever be this clever. I will tell about that channel to my friends interested in electronics.
Hah thanks so much for the words!
That's a really good tutorial. I would love to see more such in-depth video.
a lot of circuit designers don't care about this stuff.