M
Mike H
Guest
I'm working on a circut design to replace the LED's that came in a
parking-light assembly on an automobile. The manufacturers design used
some HP designed circuit that simply used current limiting resistors to
drive the leds. For whatever reason something shorted out and things
became warm enough to take the isulation off the power connection at the
circut board, melting the board itself.
Time to build a new circut with new white LED's.
Considering the voltage variability of a automobile alternator I've
decided to build into the new circut a current source rather than a using
a current limiting resistor.
Digging around it appears the LM334 is a good solution. I have 20 LED's
to light in this array.
12 volts with an estimated 3.2 volt forward voltage on the LED's allows me
3 leds per series.
3 leds per series means 7 series assemblies.
As I'm completely new to this, the question that remains for me is what is
the value of the resistor I choose to set the current output of the LM334?
The LM334 has an upper limit of 10ma, but people in the model trains world
have been able to run it at 12ma. That is the goal for me as well, get an
output from the LM334 of 12ma.
Any comments or suggestions are welcomed.
Here is a link to the circut.
http://www.frontiernet.net/~miketoni/circut.jpg
The ideas for this circuit came from the circut on this website:
http://www.pollensoftware.com/railroad/circuit.html
Thanks.
parking-light assembly on an automobile. The manufacturers design used
some HP designed circuit that simply used current limiting resistors to
drive the leds. For whatever reason something shorted out and things
became warm enough to take the isulation off the power connection at the
circut board, melting the board itself.
Time to build a new circut with new white LED's.
Considering the voltage variability of a automobile alternator I've
decided to build into the new circut a current source rather than a using
a current limiting resistor.
Digging around it appears the LM334 is a good solution. I have 20 LED's
to light in this array.
12 volts with an estimated 3.2 volt forward voltage on the LED's allows me
3 leds per series.
3 leds per series means 7 series assemblies.
As I'm completely new to this, the question that remains for me is what is
the value of the resistor I choose to set the current output of the LM334?
The LM334 has an upper limit of 10ma, but people in the model trains world
have been able to run it at 12ma. That is the goal for me as well, get an
output from the LM334 of 12ma.
Any comments or suggestions are welcomed.
Here is a link to the circut.
http://www.frontiernet.net/~miketoni/circut.jpg
The ideas for this circuit came from the circut on this website:
http://www.pollensoftware.com/railroad/circuit.html
Thanks.