Testing dodgy 100W LEDs from ebay sellers.

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  • Опубликовано: 11 июн 2015
  • You can now buy me cake and things to take apart at:- / bigclive
    I was looking for some 100W LEDs to use in my exiting 20W lights to spread the dissipation better and hopefully create very long lasting lights. I bought some from two different ebay sellers based in China and deliberately tried two different price ranges to see how price affected quality.
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Комментарии • 1,1 тыс.

  • @whidbeyman
    @whidbeyman 9 лет назад +24

    A few points: 1. encapsulant over LED dice is soft, and it is fairly easy to damage the wirebonds on these multi-chip LEDs with any amount of pressure on the encap. The result is usually a short or intermittent short, which would explain the patterns you see. The lack of mechanically protective packaging is of more concern than ESD protective packaging, in my view. 2. Some people think that perfect matching is essential for proper current sharing, however, most high output LEDs are fairly resistive (see slope of VI curve) so 'self-ballasting'. This accounts for why strings of different effective lengths will still light up. 3. As others have suggested, these are probably reject units, but possibly just badly handled units. In my experience, many Chinese suppliers are capable of producing very high quality goods, but there are also plenty of vendors who will sell low quality stuff to anyone willing to pay. I am an LED illumination design engineer.

  • @TrollFaceTheMan
    @TrollFaceTheMan 8 лет назад +358

    Never thought I would be sitting on RUclips watching videos about LED's but here I am XD
    Anyways thank you for making this!

    • @art3misy
      @art3misy 8 лет назад +5

      loll same

    • @sergio1tsov
      @sergio1tsov 8 лет назад +1

      same :)

    • @woof5427
      @woof5427 7 лет назад +12

      high five for not watching the bbc and the utter shite they put out!

    • @margarethobbs2471
      @margarethobbs2471 7 лет назад

      Sergio Odintsov m

    • @CoolKoon
      @CoolKoon 6 лет назад

      TrollFaceTheMan Well, it definitely beats frying one's brain with Happy Tree Friends for instance....

  • @crysis4real
    @crysis4real 7 лет назад +84

    I wish this guy was my Science and Technology teacher back in School days.. Well done on your great video and please make more :-)

  • @brexant
    @brexant 8 лет назад +15

    The "real" issue is that the LEDs that light at very small current will be seriously overdriven when the voltage/amperage is set to achieve 100 watts. They will usually fail prematurely at open circuit and toss the whole string they are in. End result? A rooted light.

  • @asdreww
    @asdreww 9 лет назад +4

    This may be a more recent thing. I puchased 2 100w warm white ones off a Chinese seller when they were around £4.50 each, and both were perfect. They have been installed in my car as auxiliary main beam headlights for 18 months at least & have not deteriorated at all.

  • @Sqeezerful
    @Sqeezerful 9 лет назад +10

    I can confirm your findings. Even with the more „expensive“ ones there seem to be 2 or 3 dim LEDs in the matrix of 100. But this refers to the 23..24Volt range in which they are quite faint. If I increase this to e.g. 26..27V my eye can’t assess the brightness any more as they are too bright. Using some sun glasses and welding equipment I managed to figure out that the brightness at that point is pretty even all across the matrix. Or in other words - the dim ones got up to brightness.
    So I would not worry so much about the voltage the individual LEDs need to “visually emit light” but rather focus on abnormalities in the range (28+Volts) they are typically operated. In case of mine there wasn’t a noticeable brightness difference.
    Additional remark: Just if one LED in the chain lights up - that doesn’t mean it is the only sink of energy. LEDs typically behave like 2V Zener Diodes (well 3V-ish in this case). But assuming that the reverse bias breakdown voltage is somewhat similar (say variance 1.9..2.2V) amongst LEDs the overall balance isn’t harmed significantly. To my experience with conventional LED’s - the breakdown voltage varies but even ones with the same current at the same voltage might differ in brightness.
    So unless you intend a very precise light distribution in very dim lights I wouldn’t worry too much about the inner balance of diodes.

    • @atruebrit6452
      @atruebrit6452 5 лет назад +1

      they even out with voltage. his assessment is not correct, and it isn't the first time.
      i'm not even bothering to explain, they are all ok. try to "short"2 out of 10 and the others will instantly burn. or 9 out of 10.
      he's so wrong he's not even funny.
      he was refunded, because all sellers do that, afraid of bad rating.

    • @atruebrit6452
      @atruebrit6452 4 года назад +1

      @Matthayi Naalaaman No, that's not how LEDs work. Or any diode.

    • @atruebrit6452
      @atruebrit6452 4 года назад +1

      @Matthayi Naalaaman Shutup dumbass.
      Or no 2 diodes are absolutely identical to the millivolt or microampere. Some will open before others, in the margin of error. I have a 12yo set of LED used for thousands of hours on my greenhouse that does exactly the same in low current...
      So yes, the fact that some series-connected diodes open before others is irrelevant.
      Now pay me for educating you.

  • @timdaniels2989
    @timdaniels2989 8 лет назад +1

    Thank you for taking the time to post this video. I truly appreciate it Sincerity Tim D

  • @galaxyjumper32084
    @galaxyjumper32084 8 лет назад

    Thank you for the video. I myself wanted to experiment with some led lighting and had no idea this was an issue. Thanks for making me an informed consumer. Have a great day.

  • @urzaspath1234
    @urzaspath1234 7 лет назад +6

    what do you recommend for 100 watt led? or just buy 10x10watt cree XM-l2?

  • @hendrikhendrikson2941
    @hendrikhendrikson2941 8 лет назад +54

    Question remains is on where to buy the good ones on Ebay. I guess one can't.

    • @bigclivedotcom
      @bigclivedotcom  8 лет назад +14

      +Hendrik Hendrikson It's hard finding good LEDs on ebay. Even sellers that provide better ones may provide crappy one the next time.

    • @tommyjw4527
      @tommyjw4527 8 лет назад +6

      +Hendrik Hendrikson I just bought one on ebay (item 331620077265) and all 100 worked for $5. Not that they'll always sell perfect ones but it's a start.

    • @hendrikhendrikson2941
      @hendrikhendrikson2941 8 лет назад

      Tommy Waldner Thanks a zillion!

    • @SpeakerLoverEPIC
      @SpeakerLoverEPIC 8 лет назад +3

      +Hendrik Hendrikson good LEDS aren't on eBay try Amazon

    • @hendrikhendrikson2941
      @hendrikhendrikson2941 8 лет назад +1

      SpeakerLover1000#EPIC Thanks mate. You're right of course :)

  • @lochinvar00465
    @lochinvar00465 7 лет назад +1

    back when all we had were the single red leds (1970's), I tested the voltage/current of a few batches. Similar results, top quality leds were almost all identical while the cheap ones especially in bulk were all over the map.

  • @jdjz62
    @jdjz62 8 лет назад

    Enjoyed your very well made and informative video.
    Thanks for the instruction and information. I subscribed immediately after watching, looking forward to watching your old and future posts.

  • @doitle
    @doitle 9 лет назад +31

    A better way to detect dead LEDs might be to turn it up to full voltage/current draw, then use a SLR camera or even your video camera if it has manual settings. If you set the aperture very high (High F number = Small Opening) and increase the shutter speed to very fast you'll be able to see each individual LED while they are running at full power. Then you could see if any are actually out and it's not just an imbalance of forward voltages of some of them where they're not quite on yet at the low voltages.

    • @83hjf
      @83hjf 9 лет назад +28

      ***** or use a welding mask glass

    • @Mattomeo15
      @Mattomeo15 6 лет назад

      Welding glass is very helpful for this as already stated. He did however explain in the video, how he would not turn them up to full brightness without a heatsink attached. This is also a factor to consider for quick testing of LED chips.

  • @radicalsini
    @radicalsini 7 лет назад +8

    I learned most of my P4 (physics electronic circuits module) from this guy
    He's the reason I'm doing well in the electricity part of physics
    thank you very muchly

  • @kenwolfe6093
    @kenwolfe6093 8 лет назад +1

    *****Clive, Good to see a fellow HVAC/R guy taking stuff apart. When you're showing this type of led array, please show it through a dark glass so even at higher power power we can see the individual LEDs. Thanks!

  • @jr10
    @jr10 9 лет назад

    Yet another very comprehensive review.
    Thank you sir. Keep up the good work!

  • @blargcoster
    @blargcoster 8 лет назад +71

    6:35 The LED made a $, you got robbed and they are taunting you.

    • @Iliek
      @Iliek 8 лет назад +6

      And now thousands of people know the product is shit. You think they're laughing still?

    • @Steve_Just_Steve
      @Steve_Just_Steve 5 лет назад +3

      Doubt they found it real funny when they refunded BigC's cash.

    • @lazyh-online4839
      @lazyh-online4839 4 года назад

      @@Iliek definitely, people still buy them because they're cheap and they work, they just don't work well.

  • @kornowsd
    @kornowsd 8 лет назад +5

    A couple of things, after seeing this video. First question is, are these 100W LED's advertised as "dimmable?" Second question is about the power supply that you're running them with, is it a constant current source or a constant voltage source? This creates a huge difference in the final result.
    If the LED modules are not dimmable, then this is the behavior that one would expect out of a non-dimmable module. Non-dimmable arrays are not designed to run at current/voltages lower than their engineered thresholds and will generally operate quite erratically below those thresholds. Nowhere did I see this delineation called out and it's an important one. If these were dimmable LED's AND your input operating parameters (voltage and current) were consistent with the LED design parameters, then this behavior would be considered defective.
    Also, missing from your conversation, here, is the lumen output at the full operational voltage/current. That measurement is a critical one, as well, as it determines if the internal matrix is, indeed, operating appropriately, or accumulating failures.. Design centers require that each LED has a specific lumen output in order to achieve the final value (1000 lumens, 2000 lumens, etc). Should a single LED, in the matrix, fail, then the appropriate output value will not be achieved. As one, or more, LED's in the matrix fails the lumen output begins to fall, dramatically.
    LED diodes have a forward knee voltage/current parameter, as do standard diodes, beyond which they are gated on. Depending on manufacturing tolerances, there are a good number that may turn on early, and a good number that may turn on late and a middle range that all turn on about the same time. Basically one of those "bell curve" situations. Design centers can be as much as +/- 20% variation in less expensive products due to differences in substrate thickness, etc. That doesn't mean defect, it just means less accuracy. This is no different than the difference between 20% resistors and 1% resistors, where the 20% resistors are built to less rigorous standards of accuracy, not quality... but, even the 1% resistors have a temperature coefficient variations which can make the 1% tolerance meaningful only at room temperature, for instance, and outside of room temperature they can vary as much as 5-10% depending on whether the environment is hotter, or colder. A 1% resistor rated at 5PPM is MUCH more accurate than a 1% resistor rated at 50PPM, yet both are sold as 1% tolerance. And, in circuits where absolute accuracy isn't entirely critical it makes no sense to buy 1%, 5PPM resistors when a 20% resistor at 1/10 the cost will perform just as well. The same rules apply in non-dimmable LED modules where tolerances are not required to be tightly controlled and managed, as the only "correct" way to operate the LED module is at rated voltage/current. It is ONLY at that point that all LED's, in the matrix, are required to be both on, and emitting light at full rated power. Anything beyond that point (above, or below) doesn't not require that all LED's operate in unison, or equally.
    Finally, as individual LED's, in the matrix, operate at a sub-par level, the CRI and the chromaticity variations begin to degrade rapidly. Again, it's something that can be measured, that is both relevant, and scientific, rather than just looking at whether or not individual LED's light below specified operating thresholds. All of these factors, taken together, determine whether an LED is crap, or functional. All that I see, personally, in this video, is operation of an LED matrix below operating thresholds and calling it crap without actual measurements being made, and referenced. I'm not defending either you, or the eBay sellers in this comment... however, for me to make an accurate determination of product quality I would need to see a full spectrum of actual measurements made with the product operating within the correct thresholds, all presented together to make an accurate determination of product quality. Without that, it's all just conjecture and speculation...

    • @thysonsacclaim
      @thysonsacclaim 7 лет назад

      So Can you explain why the other chips were fine on the same power supply?

    • @kornowsd
      @kornowsd 7 лет назад

      It all depends, as others, and I, have responded to in your comments - whether or not minimal operating parameters (BOTH current AND voltage) were met on the LED. If this is, for instance, an LED that requires constant drive current and you're powering it with a constant voltage source, the current parameter, in many instances will be insufficiently met when the supply is dialed in to the correct drive voltage. The same applies if the LED requires a constant voltage source and you're powering the LED with a constant current supply, the current condition may be met but voltage variations, at the adjusted current level, may not be within the operating thresholds defined by the device. The methods you use, and your explanation in the video, fail to take those highly critical factors, which govern LED performance, into account.
      Also, the LED modules you're using - if they're dimmable, what is the dimming range? Many LED modules will only dim from 10-15% to 100% and, below the the lower threshold value operate inefficiently and ineffectively. In fact, I just bought a pricey LED troffer that supports dimming for my garage/workshop. It dims from 10% to 100% and, below 10% some of the LED's in the matrix light, others don't, as the manufacturer suggests they will. Manufacturers, due to design tolerances, expected light output, cost and other considerations will, effectively, limit the dimming range to match design criteria. Below the accepted dimming range the LED's operate in, often, erratic ways. My workshop lights have 10 year, unconditional, warranties. They're not cheap, they're not junk, but they don't dim below 10% and 20% of them don't dim, consistently, below 15%. The company says that's acceptable and "within tolerances."
      To determine if an LED module is "good" one must match the power supply, used to power the module, to the module itself. Operating a constant current LED with a constant voltage source will yield inconsistent results as will the reverse. So, first, the supply has to be matched to the LED drive requirements. Just because you're operating a constant voltage LED on a constant current source supply at the recommended voltage does not mean that it will function per specification, or even normally because the voltage is set right. Current can, still, under those conditions, be compromised. The next step, once the supply/driver type (constant current or constant voltage) is matched to the LED requirements, then you have can only work the LED dimming through the range of MANUFACTURER SPECIFIED values. Throughout that range the manufacturer specifies lumen, or LUX, output values (usually in the form of a graph), CRI index values, etc. A device that is good will meet manufacturer specifications in BOTH light output and color stability. But those items MUST be measured ALONG WITH the appropriate "drive" parameter (current or voltage) with the other "constant" element (current or voltage), always set correctly. If one doesn't make the full gamut of measurements, under the appropriate drive conditions there can be no determination of product quality. You cannot ascertain, for instance, CRI, using your eye. Even high quality LED's can, and many times do, fail a CRI measurement across the span of their dimmable range. LUX/Lumen output is, also, something that's hard to tell w/ the naked eye, unless you're the equivalent of Ansel Adams who could, within +/- 10%, consistently, determine how bright a light source is. For the other 99.9999999999% of us, we need a light meter to measure light intensity. And, light intensity has to be measured under controlled conditions. If you measure at 1" from the source one time, and 2" the next, the law about the light dropping as a function of the square of the distance comes into play in a hurry... as 100% change has a considerable impact on measurement.
      My job is to test/characterize LED's, specifically high-end streetlights... I spend a good amount of time doing this sort of thing... many "cheap" LED's, such as the ones you display, are actually very good WHEN you operate them WITHIN acceptable tolerances and boundaries AND drive them with the appropriate type of source. If you don't operate within acceptable boundaries and drive them with the appropriate source they will operate erratically, as they should. That doesn't mean they're bad, or cheap, or junk, it just means they weren't operated appropriately, much like a car in which, rather than gasoline you put diesel fuel in the tank... doesn't mean the car is junk, just means it's not being operated correctly... you can't judge the quality of either, if you're not maintaining them by their individual standards...

    • @thysonsacclaim
      @thysonsacclaim 7 лет назад +2

      AKA TLD--Didn't answer. Mismatched LEDs cause that.

  • @dj4mc
    @dj4mc 8 лет назад +1

    I have had very good result with this type of LED. I tried what you did connecting to my bench supply and raising the voltage. I get the erratic lighting of some. This is at far below nominal current. I can say that when I properly heat sink them (I am using CPU heatsinks) and keep the die below 50-60C) and connect them to a current limited supply (about 3 amps) they are awesome. I measured 8-9000 lumens on mine. I bought a few cool white and warm white. I am going to use the for video lighting.

  • @abraxsis
    @abraxsis 8 лет назад

    I picked up a few 100w ones from Sure Electronics, so far so good. Started turning on, all 100 of them at around 24-25 volts. So bright I needed a welding glass to look at them by 29v, all 100 still lighting up. The 10w ones I got from the same seller works a treat too. sure-display on US eBay

  • @metallitech
    @metallitech 9 лет назад +22

    Don't they even-out when you increase the voltage up to normal? Would putting a bunch of neutral filters over the camera lens and applying full power be a way to see this?

    • @yakir11114
      @yakir11114 8 лет назад +4

      +metallitech YES

    • @someguy2741
      @someguy2741 5 лет назад +1

      No. They dont even out. They will stay the same relative intensity. A properly matched LED produces a lot more light. I havent tried comparing light levels between a crappy LED and the same wattage through a good led. From what i have seen it seems a whole lot less.

    • @lazyh-online4839
      @lazyh-online4839 4 года назад +1

      @@someguy2741 it might not even them out entirely, but I can say from experience that they do even out quite a bit as the brightness increases. What's causing some to light and some not to is the difference in threshold voltage, and when fully lit you've already reached that threshold voltage across all LEDs, meaning that any difference at full brightness will be minimal at best.

    • @someguy2741
      @someguy2741 4 года назад

      @@lazyh-online4839 This is quite an old post :p Since then I did do some testing. I had bought some 10W leds, some were very well matched and some were not. I could not get the poorly matched ones to take 10W, they max out at 7W and get very hot at 7W. There is quite a lot of difference in light output with a well matched LED. At much lower wattages it produced better light and MUCH less heat at 7W.
      The junk ones and good ones cost nearly the same, price doesnt matter. What was interesting is that the good ones came separately wrapped in plastic sleeves and had a serial number etched in the back... that was pretty cool since you know they passed quality control. The junk ones came in a large bag all loose.
      I was surprised at how much difference in light per watt.
      Given the lockdowns now is the perfect time to experiment :)

    • @lazyh-online4839
      @lazyh-online4839 4 года назад

      @@someguy2741 awesome reply, thanks for posting. Only trouble for me is that with four kids I don't have the budget for that level of experimenting in my own household haha
      Hope you are staying safe and healthy and thanks for sharing. Any tips on who you found best to buy from?

  • @3p1catomicvideos38
    @3p1catomicvideos38 7 лет назад +5

    I know nothing about electronics. Now I know about LEDs and I really like the guys accent

  • @36jemini
    @36jemini 8 лет назад

    Nice job man! thank you for taking the effort to make a video.

  • @ianhosier4042
    @ianhosier4042 3 года назад +2

    The strings that light at a low voltage contain a blown led or two. Leds usually fail as a short circuit so you could wind up the volts and try and blow the dodgy strings into open circuit, the remaining strings might then behave sensibly.

  • @drspastic
    @drspastic 8 лет назад +4

    those leds are not as bad as they seem, i bought lots of different ones too and most are indeed the same as the $2 100w cheapos. but they do work and put out a lot of light with the correct power supply. the reason the chips come on at different voltages is because the chips were not binned and were cheap as such or outside spec. i have used the cheap white, blue and red (orangy red) and have not had one blow yet but i have blown several drivers. led is a current device but whack a thermistor on your heatsink wired to the voltage setting on your driver and a capacitor across it for soft start. the spectrograms are very useful for hydro, only missing 660nm which should be supplemented by some non-phosphor chips.

    • @kka10001
      @kka10001 5 лет назад

      I agree, as I have several and at the proper working voltage they work fine and for the price it is a hell of a deal. Quit crying of 3 buck.

    • @Steve_Just_Steve
      @Steve_Just_Steve 5 лет назад

      But they won't last. The brighter ones are pulling more current and will fail much sooner.

    • @PafiTheOne
      @PafiTheOne 5 лет назад

      @@Steve_Just_Steve First step: what do you know about series connection? Can the current be different for serially connected LEDs?

  • @anatolesokol
    @anatolesokol 8 лет назад +4

    have you notice about the minimal voltage of diode to work? LED is a diode.
    more over, the series of diodes voltage drop shall not be the same on every diode!
    more more over, the parallel series of such diodes must consume a current that you have LIMITED. so how you supposed every single diode to light up similarly and evenly... you trying to "fire" the diode by applying a minimum energy, so some diodes will fire up first, dropping the voltage on them, not leaving the chance of other diodes to "fire up".
    try doing the same experiment by applying the correct voltage to all "set of diodes" as specified by manufacturer, then block the light by some sort of filter, then you should be able to see single led diodes by your camera, then and only then you shall speculate about their light intensity)))
    have a fun, you will be surprised.

  • @ciprianwinerElectronicManiac
    @ciprianwinerElectronicManiac 9 лет назад

    Thanks for sharing this info with us. I really didn't think about testing the matching of the leds because as far as I knew in practice, at full rated current they are going to be fine enough especially at their price. But now, I'll be wary of them. Cheers :)

  • @capwkidd
    @capwkidd 8 лет назад +2

    Wow, I had no idea! No wonder the lights that come with theses big LEDs are so expensive, like the Zylight F8, which has a 200w version now!

  • @techkitsune
    @techkitsune 8 лет назад +19

    You can get the best-binned individually-packaged LEDs and put them on a LARGE BOARD, in the same configuration, and this will happen the same. This is what happens when your parallel/series arrays get too large and the lighting pattern your LEDs display show exactly this. You can't avoid this without a control resistor on each series string. Even the best-binned 100w COBs do this below their appropriate drive voltage, ALL OF THEM.
    I design/consult on LED units. This is just basic physics kicking you in the butt.

    • @orbitaaltube
      @orbitaaltube 7 лет назад

      Could you recommend a reliable LED chip source? I have an outside light that had failed due to water ingress and need to replace the chip, its a 30w warm white.

    • @techkitsune
      @techkitsune 7 лет назад +2

      Nichia, Cree, Epistar, Edison, Osram.

    • @dougankrum3328
      @dougankrum3328 7 лет назад

      ....Phillips.....lumi-leds...

    • @techkitsune
      @techkitsune 7 лет назад

      I can't trust Philips further than I can throw them, not after getting sold 25w grow lights which were advertised as 40w.

    • @Kyle-pz7os
      @Kyle-pz7os 7 лет назад +2

      +techkitsune it's common practice to advertise the led light as the equivalent amount of light it will replace

  • @Mr_Meowingtons
    @Mr_Meowingtons 8 лет назад +5

    have you ever found a good source to fined the 100watt LED's

    • @beesley45
      @beesley45 8 лет назад

      331620077265

    • @thelol1759
      @thelol1759 7 лет назад

      Hmmm? Link to store?

    • @beesley45
      @beesley45 7 лет назад +1

      Ebay, obvs

    • @thelol1759
      @thelol1759 7 лет назад +4

      Pigeon
      Not really obvious tbh, but thanks anyway man.

    • @thelol1759
      @thelol1759 7 лет назад

      Mick C.
      I've had some luck actually getting the dispute system on Aliexpress to work and getting free LEDs as a result. But I wouldn't count on it.

  • @kengamble8595
    @kengamble8595 8 лет назад +1

    I thank you sir ! After watching this I tested my just arrived led lights....... nine out of ten....... good ! I had checked them at full voltage and noticed that one did not seem quite right and it was the bad one. VERY helpful video as all of yours are, so again I thank you and I do appreciate your time !

    • @jimviau327
      @jimviau327 7 лет назад

      Ken can you tell us who that seller was. Id like to buy some myself but after viewing this I no longer know where to to buy?

    • @kengamble8595
      @kengamble8595 7 лет назад

      +Jim Viau
      Really I don't think it makes much difference as to the individual seller from China. I got mine from Geek. Com and probably just got lucky! Wish I had a better answer for you!

  • @kevinchamberlain7928
    @kevinchamberlain7928 7 лет назад +1

    Thanks for the heads-up, Clive. Keep 'em coming! :-)

  • @alenaxp
    @alenaxp 8 лет назад +3

    Thank you I learn a lot from you

  • @renzevenir4853
    @renzevenir4853 7 лет назад +5

    Okay, their quality aren't very good but the best part is they're so cheap!

  • @tritonmole
    @tritonmole 8 лет назад +1

    At first i thought some leds are dead too, but then i got a lense that focuses individual leds on a wall. i ran the matrix at full 100W power with heat sink on and all 100 worked fine. i concluded that each led had slightly different volt-ampere characteristics and in low power mode some turn on later then others. And led conducts some current, even if it is not emitting light so it explains why some in same series glow and others dont

  • @itsglizda345
    @itsglizda345 4 года назад +1

    i bought 20 days ago a 100w led from aliexpress for 2$ and im really happy with it. Difference in brightness is ~10% and only 1 led from 100 are lighting at 1.5V more than others so i think it is good deal.

  • @Psychlist1972
    @Psychlist1972 9 лет назад +29

    Seems maybe you got the factory rejects stolen by an employee

    • @sinephase
      @sinephase 8 лет назад +10

      Pete Brown lol I really doubt they'd have to steal those :P

    • @paulweerheim
      @paulweerheim 8 лет назад +5

      +sinephase then again, I really doubt they give them away for free in China.

    • @cyborgrat
      @cyborgrat 8 лет назад +5

      +Sharp Paul could be the "night" batches, the company my uncle works for makes quality control tests on chips and other electronics to make sure their clients order is to exact specs.
      Some place will run a good batch with example a part that cost 10cents(the one you need) but when no one is supervising they replace that 10cent one with a 5 cent equivalent(so less quality. or in some case they will just use the same machine set up that in the "day" make yours and then they make their cheaper version at "night"

    • @dr666demento
      @dr666demento 6 лет назад +7

      Probably not stolen, but they are rejects. For many years the same thing was done with multicore CPUs. They'd run the tests, and for example, if all 4 cores were good - that shipped as a 4 core. Three pass, one fails, disable the bad one and ship it as a 3 core. Two good, two bad, same, ship it as 2.

    • @edwardmorgan5750
      @edwardmorgan5750 5 лет назад +1

      @@dr666demento Goes back even further. The 486 SX was a regular 486, except that the FPU failed tests so they disabled it.

  • @proyectosledar
    @proyectosledar 8 лет назад +17

    Hi Clive xD

  • @jimbobbillybob
    @jimbobbillybob 8 лет назад +2

    It would be interesting to try looking at the LED light distribution at full power, maybe by diminishing the light with a welding glass window or something. Maybe these discrepancies at low voltages don't matter much, as long as you have sufficient heat sinking? It would also be really awesome to have an IR image of the back of the metal pad after turning on the chip for 1s, to check the heat distribution and difference in heat load chip-to-chip.

  • @jayodea2661
    @jayodea2661 9 лет назад

    thanks for the heads up! i was just about to buy some of these! i think i will just create an array of 1 or 3 watt chips!

  • @GianmarioScotti
    @GianmarioScotti 8 лет назад +5

    LEDs are not sensitive to static electricity.

    • @bigclivedotcom
      @bigclivedotcom  8 лет назад +20

      +Gianmario Scotti (Mario) The Gallium, Nitride ones are. Good suppliers ship them in metallised bags.

    • @GianmarioScotti
      @GianmarioScotti 8 лет назад +3

      +bigclivedotcom OK.

    • @GianmarioScotti
      @GianmarioScotti 8 лет назад

      Funny how this reply appears among my G+ notifications as if I had shared the video on G+.

    • @GianmarioScotti
      @GianmarioScotti 8 лет назад +14

      +bigclivedotcom this seems to be the case for LEDs using sapphire as substrate, which now seems to be the majority of them. So, I stand corrected.

  • @gameheadmail
    @gameheadmail 8 лет назад +4

    I would bet that an employee is pocketing the bad chips and selling them.

  • @Xynudu
    @Xynudu 8 лет назад +2

    Interesting video. Thanks for posting.
    Cheers Rob

  • @PeterScargill
    @PeterScargill 6 лет назад

    That's very informative, Clive - wow, I would have expected better quality on these LEDs - looks like the 20 LED versions are fine - the rest are rejects perhaps.... perhaps now, thanks to this video, more people know how to test, more will get thrown back!!!! LED lighting can be SO good but generally is so badly let down by rubbish manufacturing putting cost before quality - and that applies to many LED lamps (no, I don't sell LEDs before anyone asks - I just use a lot of them at home).

  • @sentientagent
    @sentientagent 8 лет назад +7

    Are they really damaged? It could be an intended feature. What do they look like when they're fully powered to spec, and you lay a filter over it? do they still have that pattern?
    these individual leds could be sitting on zener diodes with randomized breakdown voltages so that you can sensibly control the brightness of the entire unit by simply dialing down the voltage, and so you can cycle it on without getting a massive sudden current spike.
    you're running the unit at 0.5% of its intended workload and complaining that it doesn't work like you expect it to? sorry for being skeptical but this wasn't very scientific.

    • @derekrobinson4636
      @derekrobinson4636 8 лет назад +9

      +sentientagent
      Highly unlikely that there would be a randomized Zener breakdowns. The LED junctions themselves could have a variance in doping if this type of function was required.
      You are correct of course about running the unit at such low level and expecting it to function. The demonstration is a good indicator that the matching may be poor but extrapolating that the units are faulty is a bit dodgy.
      The design and batch sampling at the factory should have ensured that the unit adheres to its specification, over the permitted drive levels.
      The cynic in me (and experience) however, tells me that they are very possibly the failures.
      Even that though, presupposes that the components are unusable which is not necessarily the case as the the testing may separate into more results than just good and bad.

    • @MyBigThing2010
      @MyBigThing2010 6 лет назад +2

      If you know about zener then a series run of LEDs shouldn't be so hard to comprehend resulting in your OP. ...ugh

    • @joshdau
      @joshdau 5 лет назад +1

      The issue with the LED die not being matched lies in their IV curve characteristics. The reason why you need matched LEDs (that should all come on around the same time), is to ensure consistent and even current throughout the entire array. If you have a few die that have a lower forward voltage, they'll conduct proportionally higher amount of current over the rest of the die, leading to thermal stress in that area and eventually failure. Even though it is performing at "0.5%" of its expected workload, the die should still have similar (if not near identical) forward voltages, and should all turn on at the same time. What you're seeing in this video is a very big indicator of a low quality LED array.

    • @atruebrit6452
      @atruebrit6452 5 лет назад

      @@joshdau
      they even out with voltage. his assessment is not correct, and it isn't the first time.
      i'm not even bothering to explain, they are all ok. try to "short"2 out of 10 and the others will instantly burn. or 9 out of 10.
      he's so wrong he's not even funny.
      he was refunded, because all sellers do that, afraid of bad rating.

    • @lunchboxproductions1183
      @lunchboxproductions1183 5 лет назад +3

      @@atruebrit6452 "He's wrong and I'm right but I'm not going to bother explaining" Fuck off clown, might as well change your name to "A True Twit"

  • @smallenginedude71
    @smallenginedude71 9 лет назад +4

    there is certainly a reason why they only cost 10 dollars. buy some from CREE they will probably cost over 50 dollars but hey, you get what you pay for

    • @lazyh-online4839
      @lazyh-online4839 4 года назад

      There's lots of other reputable LED manufacturers besides Cree, just do a quick search on Mouser or digikey.

  • @RoboticNerd
    @RoboticNerd 8 лет назад

    I think I found a really good seller. I bought a few more just to make sure. The one I got has all but two of the LEDs glowing evenly and two glowing dimmer. None were out. That to me is a VERY good for a $2 led!

  •  9 лет назад +1

    There is a reasoning behind those trashy LEDs and it makes sense and it is pretty simple:
    1: LEDs, _if_ produced and used correctly, can provide decades of zero maintenance, care-free operation. Imagine street lights and car headlights not needing repairs in one's lifetime.
    2: Chinese LEDs device factories cannot survive decades of not selling their products. There is only so much market you could fill with one product and _it needs to break_ soon enough that the production line does not stop.
    That's that...

  • @CoolDudeClem
    @CoolDudeClem 9 лет назад +13

    I have one of those 100w LEDs, all the LEDs in it light up on full power, it's only patchwork at lower voltages.

    • @frankiesparkes3947
      @frankiesparkes3947 7 лет назад +12

      But it shouldn't be. If what Clive is saying about the circuit design is correct, all LEDs should light at an even brightness at the same time. An inconsistent light at lower voltages - "patchwork" if you will - suggests that some chips have a decreased resistance and/or power consumption comparative to the LEDs surrounding it.
      This can result in increased degradation of the LEDs, at a faster rate, due to an overcurrent situation occurring within the LEDs with the declined resistance, meaning the whole arrangement has to be replaced sooner than its decent, consistently lighting counterparts.

    • @MyBigThing2010
      @MyBigThing2010 6 лет назад +3

      Then the one you have is JUNK

    • @AureliusR
      @AureliusR 6 лет назад +1

      CoolDudeClem -- not known for having any clue what he's talking about.

  • @videosuperhighway7655
    @videosuperhighway7655 8 лет назад +3

    I would not be surprised if whats being sold are QC rejects.

    • @richfiles
      @richfiles 8 лет назад +1

      +VIDEOSUPERHIGHWAY Quality Control? HA!!!

    • @rogerbarton497
      @rogerbarton497 3 года назад

      Like selling sausages made from "selected meat", they select all the grisly meat and put it in sausages.

  • @brandongray3097
    @brandongray3097 6 лет назад +2

    If this guy was my teacher every one of my classes would actually be interesting.

  • @sirMAXX77
    @sirMAXX77 8 лет назад +1

    Is there a way to know for sure if some stay unlit? It might be too bright to see, but if there is some other way to view through a filter, or test each diode. Is it possible that since it's such a high wattage that some resistance of some of the diodes don't have current pass though until a certain threshold, that's much higher than normal and then emits light? Are they in parallel, or series? Can you show tests of reputable suppliers?

  • @excite236
    @excite236 7 лет назад +3

    Many Chinese on ebay sell used or rejected stuff so looks like you got some junk.

    • @constantbuzz
      @constantbuzz 7 лет назад +1

      they may be factory seconds- instead of recycling them, sold with misinformation for cheap.

    • @someguy2741
      @someguy2741 5 лет назад

      @@constantbuzz like many chinese products they write the biggeat number from the best performing components and sell them all with the info even if they dont meet the mark.

  • @gamerpaddy
    @gamerpaddy 9 лет назад +3

    i got several of these, im using it since 2 years for my flashlight's (see my channel)
    at 22V they look screwed up, but with more than 24V it balances. i never had heat or current problems, not a single one broke. im running them on about 34V 3.33A(CC CV)
    fs2.directupload.net/images/150619/tgklzr69.jpg
    fs2.directupload.net/images/150619/exj7uws5.jpg
    fs2.directupload.net/images/150619/42b224l6.jpg
    There are 100W shitbricks for 80$ out there, but whos going to buy this? These one cost 3-4$ per led. you cant expect much, but you get much for the price.

  • @Rcbeacon
    @Rcbeacon 9 лет назад

    Some time ago I tested some 20 watt LED s and noticed that the emitters didn't come to life evenly as the current was slowly increased. But at a certain point they evened out and worked reliably up to 20 watts. I used a filter/attenuator like welding visor glass to see the individual LEDs as they got brighter.
    It would be interesting to know how the emitter matching affects long term reliability. Maybe the ones that light first are more stressed, or maybe there is a balancing effect possibly due to thermal coupling the evens them out at higher power levels; like paralleling mosfets.

  • @Shellyfromgore
    @Shellyfromgore 7 лет назад +2

    Thank you, that was very informative - Shell

  • @sevensurvival
    @sevensurvival 8 лет назад +23

    The chips are not dead. As You raise the current going to the chips more of them light until the point when all of them light when the level of current necessary to drive all of them are reached. The diodes that require the less current remain lit the longest as You lower the current. You must have a driver, or power supply with enough overhead , or extra power to run all diodes effectively. I like Your work, don't give up, thanks for the knowledge , and video, respect.......Seven Thunders.......

    • @highhopes3121
      @highhopes3121 8 лет назад +17

      +Ivan Quin The LEDs are in series so its all the same current. if some don't light as bright as neighbour its because the silicon is not well matched which is symptom of poor manufacturing quality. they need to put LEDs from same wafer or something to keep good match.

    • @sevensurvival
      @sevensurvival 8 лет назад +4

      That could be true in theory , but looking at the results in Your video, shows all of the diodes lighting as more power was applied, and gradually , more going out as you decreased the power going to them. It would be nice if They behaved like You wanted them to and all go out at the same time, but they don't.

    • @sevensurvival
      @sevensurvival 8 лет назад

      Never mind all that, You're doing a good experiment, and building good lights, keep up the good work, Thanks and respect.......Seven Thunders.......

    • @MrMistery101
      @MrMistery101 8 лет назад +13

      +Ivan Quin another problem I found wit these is that for the parallel series arrays, current is not even. Diodes start to fail along a series as they take a larger current than other lines. this drastically affects longevity at 75%+ output even with proper heat management.

    • @sevensurvival
      @sevensurvival 8 лет назад

      Thanks

  • @guguigugu
    @guguigugu 7 лет назад +3

    i thought LEDs aren't dimmable? i know nothing...

    • @bigclivedotcom
      @bigclivedotcom  7 лет назад +8

      You can dim an LED by either reducing the current through it or by turning it on and off very quickly and varying the on to off time. (Called pulse width modulation.)

    • @guguigugu
      @guguigugu 7 лет назад

      bigclivedotcom how come most LED bulbs say 'not dimmable'?

    • @bigclivedotcom
      @bigclivedotcom  7 лет назад +6

      It's their power supply circuitry that is not suitable for dimming on a standard wall-plate dimmer.

    • @guguigugu
      @guguigugu 7 лет назад

      i see. tnx

    • @MichaelGordon33
      @MichaelGordon33 7 лет назад +3

      Regular dimmers used for incandescent bulbs work on AC power and LEDs have to be driven with very well-regulated DC. Incandescent bulbs are basically just heaters and it doesn't really matter what quality of power you feed them.
      Your typical LED retrofit bulb contains a circuit that converts the 120V AC signal from your wall into DC to drive the LEDs. It is almost impossible to design a driver circuit that works well when fed with AC power that has been run through a dimmer first, simply because the AC->DC driver circuit no longer has a clean power supply to work from (Wallplug-dimmable LED bulbs do not work very well, especially at low dimmer settings). It's actually easier to make an LED bulb that screws works only in a non-dimmable socket with clean AC input, but that has its own remote control for doing the dimming on the DC side.
      What needs to happen is someone needs to develop an actual standard for LED lighting instead of trying to shoehorn LEDs into sockets intended for incandescent which completely different (and contradictory) needs.

  • @christianlewis7055
    @christianlewis7055 9 лет назад +1

    Channel idea that's probably already been done: test all no-name ebay products and give reviews.

  • @alangarland8571
    @alangarland8571 5 лет назад

    Maybe things have improved since this,
    but anyway I purchased online some 30 Watt LEDS similar to those shown, about 3 years ago.
    All of them are still working perfectly.

  • @hangfire5005
    @hangfire5005 9 лет назад +17

    Your running 100 watt leds at a few watts and your surprised it doesnt work?

    • @userPrehistoricman
      @userPrehistoricman 9 лет назад +31

      Jarrod P what
      LEDs aren't exactly complex ICs. Undervolting them is not damaging and should either cause the lights to not show or to be dim. They should never be patchy as this video shows.

    • @jjoonathan7178
      @jjoonathan7178 9 лет назад +9

      Jarrod P No. He is surprised that the diodes weren't matched. Even though they will (probably) all turn on at 100W, they will be collectively less bright (the power rating is what it is for a reason -- the light output from the diodes which consume too much power will not compensate for those which consume too little) and more importantly will have a much shorter lifetime. The lifetime of each column is decided by its weakest link and temperature differences can have dramatic effects on longevity. If the one "overeager" diode in a column burns out 3x quicker, the entire column dies. This is why matching is important even if you can't "see" the patchwork at full power.

    • @Blacktronics
      @Blacktronics 9 лет назад +4

      Jarrod P get out. grow a functioning brain.

    • @gordonlawrence3537
      @gordonlawrence3537 9 лет назад +2

      Jarrod P ever thought about learning how LED's work in series?

    • @BrianG61UK
      @BrianG61UK 9 лет назад

      Blacktronics How do you know they are just in series? They might have some resistance in parallel with the individual LEDs.
      I'd like to see what they look like at, say, somewhere between 30W and 100W. You'd need dark glass or something to be able to see if all the LEDs were working more equally in that situation.

  • @williamccjr
    @williamccjr 9 лет назад

    Ive really been enjoying your videos lately, very interesting stuff, thanks for posting. So I have a couple CPU heatsinks from old PC's that I gutted for parts & I was thinking of using one to DIY a 100W LED flood light. There are videos on how to make DIY LED Flood lights but you really seem to know your stuff, so I was hoping you could recommend a parts list for me, if possible? What 100W LED's would you recommend & what other components would I need? Thanks for your time.

  • @skysurferuk
    @skysurferuk 8 лет назад

    Excellent observation, thanks for sharing.

  • @n1ghtblur
    @n1ghtblur 8 лет назад

    They're okay for the price. I mounted one with a voltage converter in my Honda's dome light. I'm running it at 22V with no noticeable issues in consistency, and it is a fairly clean 5000-6000k in temp. It is true that they do not light evenly, you can see that when near the forward voltage. For $15, it looks like I have a 100W halogen in my cab. I have no cooling issues at 22V and I'm not using a dedicated heatsink for it.

  • @silkysixx
    @silkysixx 3 года назад

    Would you be able to add in a cap and resistor (and/or other components) to make an LED chip come on and go out a bit more gently, mimicking small tungsten lamps?

  • @darrenfulwood3766
    @darrenfulwood3766 3 года назад

    Didn’t expect that. Well briefed. Cheers.

  • @Arckivio
    @Arckivio 9 лет назад

    I'm a bit confused by the voltages of these LED's. I bought a few 50 watt LED's a few years ago & the maximum voltage to run them must have been 24 volts as that's the supply I bought. Currently using one as a spotlight in my workshop. I did do this test with a bench supply & mine lit the same way these ones did, a few random chips light up first. I used a doubled up piece of welding curtain to look at the chips at full voltage & they do all light up in the end but obviously not matched as you said.

  • @mspenrice
    @mspenrice 6 лет назад

    Puts me in mind of trying to find high output incandescent headlamps for my bike, which only came with a hopeless single 35w incandescent, and for which 35w halogen only gave a mild upgrade and tended to burn out far too fast because of the smaller capsule and higher temperature... unfortunately it uses a Ba20d connector rather than a typical H-type, and although the connector is good for higher power hardly anyone seems to make bulbs higher than 35w. Managed to find a 45w incandescent and a 40w halogen, both of which worked fine for a while, but apart from that one seller that charged a fortune and has since disappeared, all the other offerings were obvious fakes claiming 60 to 100w output or the like (which were unlikely to be true and would burn out the alternator anyway), and LED ones with uncertain beam patterns and pie in the sky lumen claims... Seemingly aimed at 16 year olds who wanted as bright a lamp as possible for their 50cc scooter, more for bragging rights than utility as there's not really any point to high output on city streets (I was often having to ride on unlit country roads at the time, thankfully not so any more so I'm no longer bothered about finding replacements)... if it sounds too good to be true, well...

  • @jamespatrick6939
    @jamespatrick6939 8 лет назад

    So I'm here, never thought Id be interested in anything of this, but this is the 10th video I see, of how people make cheap crappy electronics and god Im enjoying it a lot

  • @heyarno
    @heyarno 8 лет назад +2

    Ok, so the 100W model is badly balanced regarding the forward voltage. Did you power them up to specs and see if they all work at least? They may even out somewhat after a break in period. Another thing I noticed is that you look directly at the light source. I find it helpful to use a strong welding glass in order to be able to observe the led's behavior under working conditions.

  • @kaelin000
    @kaelin000 8 лет назад

    Hi Clive I think I might have an explanation for the seemingly random distribution of LED's lighting;
    your 20W are indeed wired in series hence there's a consistent current passing through both 'chains'
    the 100W one is wired as a MATRIX in effect all the LED's are wired in parallel, since in the event of a failure in a particular diode you don't lose the whole stripe, but when you've got a 10x10 square any manufacturing flaws are going to show up as an inconsistent pattern of lighting.

  • @vincesnetterton5868
    @vincesnetterton5868 8 лет назад

    thanks, i have bought several identical wattage spot lights from ebay china, and they vary greatly. Now i understand why, cheers

  • @RobAtBentley
    @RobAtBentley 8 лет назад +2

    Hi, as a newbie to all this, you're videos are really good.
    The current thing that I'm really confused about is the difference between COB and other (discreet LED components such as SMDs etc) designs. i.e. I get your message about not wanting to overdrive the LEDs (say keeping them down to about 20mA) but I don't yet understand how you apply this to COB solutions. The reason is that I'm playing around with descreet component and COB solutions but am getting mixed messages (...or I've just missed the point) when considering which power supplies I need for each. For example, with discreet components (such as SMDs on LED strips) I'm hearing that the power supply should be rated higher than the (e.g.) LED string. i.e. With a 20% safety margin or more. ...but with COBs, you can use a PSU that's about the same (or less, so as not to over-drive?) as the the single or string of COBs your trying to drive. So, I currently have a 50W COB with a 50W PSU (DC: 20-40V and DC: 1.5A) and am scratching my head as to how the 1.5A current is shared between all the COB LEDs. The COB is spec'd as 10xCOB LEDs in series with 5 of these rows in parallel. Guess I'm trying to wrongly apply my understanding of discreet component LEDs circuits to a COB so, in my mis-guided approach, I seem to sharing 1.5A between the 5 parallel rows so I end up with 300mA going through each of the 10 series LEDs. Something not right here. ...so I guess that the 50 LEDs (somehow?) share the 1.5A resulting in 30mA per LED. ...but how?
    Have I got this all wrong? Guess I just don't understand the way COB LEDS work yet. Any guidance or references would really be appreciated. ...or can you do a figurative tear-down of a COB wafer itself?
    Thanks again, most enjoyable and informative.

  •  9 лет назад +1

    My 100W LEDs have 1 or 2 dead LEDs, and uneven forward voltage. But I was expecting the unevenness since it was cheap. The solution is complex, and it is to use PWM if you want really low wattage, and proper current regulation if you are at a high wattage to remove flicker and get higher efficiency.
    But when the LEDs gets too unevenly matched, it gets sort of unusable. Isn't it very likely that these are B-grade LEDs?

  • @Argyll9846
    @Argyll9846 8 лет назад

    Good one mate - had similar result with crappy LED's from Ebay - Chinese manufacture of course.

  • @davidsavage4741
    @davidsavage4741 8 лет назад

    I seen your first one shown 20 LED's lit up.... How many on the cheaper ones
    were lit?

  • @jaywon555
    @jaywon555 9 лет назад

    the majority of the factories in Guangdong (they just assemble) here source their components from the same suppliers, so the quality is quite uniform, they just had the led expo in Guangzhou recently.

  • @budthatsmyrealname
    @budthatsmyrealname 7 лет назад

    im glad i came across your video. i was just about to buy some of these leds on ebay. you said the first one the led was all lit up, where did you buy them from? thanks.

  • @Ben4lights
    @Ben4lights 8 лет назад

    It's a very professional testing.

  • @ikifkif
    @ikifkif 5 лет назад

    i would love to see your angle on some of these, new fangled, off the shelf, batteryless jump starters.. i bought some supposedly 500f caps on a board from ebay, i was rather underwhelmed. thanks

  • @wishusknight3009
    @wishusknight3009 4 года назад

    I used a bunch of those things in series parallel on a 200w psu to light an entire area. It was a really cheap way to do it.

  • @gbandyno
    @gbandyno 8 лет назад

    again another gr8 video we love you m8..keep it going..

  • @simont3686
    @simont3686 5 лет назад

    I bought one for a flashlight and it came in a nice static bag with bubble wrap around it. All LEDs lit up almost perfectly. The flashlight gives of a ton of light. If wanted i can send an eBay link.

  • @tyttuut
    @tyttuut 7 лет назад +1

    The Cree CX-1507 LEDs are decent for light fixtures. A good 550 lumen, 93 CRI chip can be had for about $4, which in small quantities is decent.

  • @mrkrvn61
    @mrkrvn61 8 лет назад

    What does a properly working 100w led look like at a lower voltage? Does it light up evenly like the 20w? I was watching another video of yours where you had a 3 led disc and each led had a different internal resistance. Is the same happening in this case? I love your videos. Thanks for sharing.

  • @JerryEricsson
    @JerryEricsson 7 лет назад

    I guess the ones I have are about 50/50 the ones I paid more for are not necessarily the best of the lot either. I have had my best luck with 50 watt color LEDs. I had a plan that has been tossed to the wind long ago, of building lights to shine on our RV while we are outdoors enjoying the early evenings at the rv parks, where I could change the color and thus the color my white RV looks in the moonlight using these. I have Red, Green and Blue large LED's some 50 Watt and one or two ended up being 100 Watt as I made my purchases. I mounted them all on old Pentium II and III heat sinks which I drilled and tapped using old taps from my gunsmithing days and used gun screws to mount them, the heads of these screws small enough so as not to interfere with the LEDS. Now that I sit here in the Mohave Desert, and think about using the lights, I realize that they are still sitting in the case put them in last summer when I completed the build, in the back room waiting to be loaded in the RV. Ah well perhaps next year. My question is, though, even as poor as they are, once you hit them with enough juice can't they still be used for illumination? I had in mind putting a couple above my router table, and table saw in my garage back in the Dakota's next spring when I get back there, to aid in seeing what I am doing and keeping my hands away from extremely fast rotating bits and blades.

  • @TheKumra
    @TheKumra 8 лет назад +2

    Have you managed to find a good supplier of these yet? It would be good to know.
    Thanks

  • @marthanewsome6375
    @marthanewsome6375 7 лет назад

    Could you recommend how many watts to get for a highly planted aquarium, actually 10 planted aquariums on a rack and would it be possible to connect them all to one power cord? I'm in Australia and our power is 240v and I was thinking of the RGB ones with the remotes.

  • @TerrariumFirma
    @TerrariumFirma 8 лет назад

    Very helpful. Can you suggest a good make of 100W LED available in the UK?

  • @mrkrvn61
    @mrkrvn61 9 лет назад

    Thank you for this info. I applaud you courage.

  • @aucrewmusik
    @aucrewmusik 9 лет назад

    I brought mine from eachbuyer. 100w ones ran fine, all shine at once. They come in plastic containers seperately.

  • @fatnick2001
    @fatnick2001 8 лет назад

    do the 100w led arrangement actually draw 100watts as you pump the voltage up (with all leds turning on eventually? I thought this is why you use a high frequency driver circuit to power the led mesh? (not pure dc?)

  • @electrodacus
    @electrodacus 9 лет назад +5

    Yes you are absolutely right those 100W are damaged LED's probably did not passed quality control.
    Guessing some of them are shorted else there is no way they will produce any light at 9V.

    • @gordonlawrence3537
      @gordonlawrence3537 9 лет назад

      ***** LED's usually dont fail like that so it's more likely a screw up with the bonding process.

    • @electrodacus
      @electrodacus 9 лет назад +1

      Gordon Lawrence They do actually fail like that as any other diode the junction melts if at high current and they get shorted but you may be right that is some sort of manufacturing process defect. This where rejected for sure at quality control and then sold as scrap at low price and then found their way on eBay.

    • @gordonlawrence3537
      @gordonlawrence3537 9 лет назад

      I have seen plenty of rectifier diodes go short but due to the way an LED works it's more common for the bonding wires to go open circuit. An LED is not just a PN junction like a rectifier diode - it does not have huge bonding surfaces to the leads they are relatively speaking tiny.

    • @electrodacus
      @electrodacus 9 лет назад +1

      Gordon Lawrence The way the LED's in this tests worked suggest that the defective LED dies are shorted.
      This 100W LED's are made out of a 10x10 x 1W matrix where 10 LED's are in series and 10 of this strings in parallel. One of them started producing light at around 9 or 10V that suggests that one of this 10 LED series strings had around 6 or 7 of them shorted so all the voltage drop will be on the working ones.

    • @gordonlawrence3537
      @gordonlawrence3537 9 лет назад

      The point still stands that it is more likely the bonding process has shorted out the LED as i said originally IE there is a solder bridge across the pads.

  • @Kie-7077
    @Kie-7077 8 лет назад

    Are these rated to work at the lesser voltage?
    Point is the proper way to test them is to stick the correct current through them and then look at the LEDs through a filter to see if they are lighting evenly at the full voltage.

  • @FloppydriveMaestro
    @FloppydriveMaestro 8 лет назад +2

    They were probably damaged by static while being shipped. In the royal mail sorting office they use automated sorting machines and the leds have probably travelled about 20 miles just inside of the machines so they will obviously be hit by static at some point since some of the belts are 2 miles long.

    • @TheScrappingJeahaha
      @TheScrappingJeahaha 8 лет назад

      +weirdstuffanimation7 the LEDs are shipped in propper antistatic bags ofcourse ;)

    • @SalahEddineH
      @SalahEddineH 8 лет назад

      +TheScrappingJeahaha You're assuming they're from responsible sellers :D Did you notice the dodgy LED's came in a gift box? :D I seriously doubt they would use anti-static wrapping with that.

  • @Kzoowallace
    @Kzoowallace 6 лет назад

    I would love to get those warm white LED's as my over head lighting for a model railway.

  • @lwilton
    @lwilton 8 лет назад

    Clive, did you try powering them backwards? I would assume those are factory rejects, but the current is SO mismatched that I have to wonder if they were assembled with some quantity of the LEDs in backwards.

  • @jsaurman
    @jsaurman 8 лет назад

    I have a couple questions:
    First, just because they ramp up at different rates, isn't it possible that all the individual led diodes in the matrix "level out" when they hit full rated power? If it's putting out the specified lumens at the rated power, wouldn't that be the case? Or is it that some are carrying a heavier current load which leads to premature failure?
    Second, how can we tell when buying LED's how to tell the difference between the winners and the duds? They all look the same online.

  • @ncalimendo
    @ncalimendo 8 лет назад

    Could you do a demo of measuring the efficiency and lumen output of the 20W led emitters when driven at about 5W-20W ?

  • @LiborTomsik
    @LiborTomsik 9 лет назад +1

    Hi, nice test but try higher power, cooling and some light filter. I'm using one of those 100W in my underwater light and they stabilize themselves at about 27V. I'm running the LED 31V 3A and when I look on the LED using welding filter I see them all nicely glowing.