DiyLightAnimation

Fun => The Porch => Topic started by: chrisatpsu on March 16, 2012,

Title: led's in series...
Post by: chrisatpsu on March 16, 2012,
if led's are in series, like a light string, do they all use the same amt of current that one uses, or do you add them all up?
Title: Re: led's in series...
Post by: trekster on March 16, 2012,
Current stays the same in a series circuit.

Ron
Title: Re: led's in series...
Post by: tbone321 on March 16, 2012,
Which means that all of the LED's that you put into that circuit need to have the same current requirement.
Title: Re: led's in series...
Post by: chrisatpsu on March 16, 2012,
so if one led is 20mA, then say a circuit of 1, 2, or 20 leds all in a series is still only 20mA? (i know the voltage adds up)
Title: Re: led's in series...
Post by: tbone321 on March 16, 2012,
The current will be whatever you set it at with the current limiting resistor depending on the voltage after the combined voltage drops.  The problem is that if your LED's are rated at different curents, you would need to set the resistor to keep the current at or below the rating of the lowest chip which could have the oter LED's being rather dim.
Title: Re: led's in series...
Post by: Steve Gase on March 17, 2012,
think of it in terms of the watts of power being used.  tally up the watts and make sure that the PS can support it.  look at the wiring that delivers these watts -- calculate the amps flowing to those LEDs (watts/voltage=amps) and make sure that the wire size can handle those amps.