C
CDESC
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"JeffM" <jeffm_@email.com> wrote in message
news:01f59c1b-937c-4934-b7d0-08721fa9f9c5@d19g2000prm.googlegroups.com...
Don't take it like if I would think this place is meant for peoples to laugh
their ass off on peoples who literally started their post with "I'm a newbie
and I need help" but I tend to take for this poor guy who, luckilly wasn't
stuck his head down in a wrecked car on the roadside providing the kind of
introduction you gave him.
-- Now to that guy. The best way to learn not to put salt in your eyes is to
know how bad it hurts -- Google your way to some electronic plans on solar
NiCD chargers, light sensors and how to do that switching. You'll get parts
for about $5 to $10 off eBay. Get a few different solar panels, a few
different kinds of leds and do the tests. Doing the maths is cool, but some
peoples did them and they're selling their product to walmart for about 3$
each because it literally sucks. Some think that they can get it right on
paper, never test anything, start the production based on theories and get
poor results.
Do your tests, find the right leds type and quantity for the illumination
you want and start from there.
;-)
news:01f59c1b-937c-4934-b7d0-08721fa9f9c5@d19g2000prm.googlegroups.com...
Kris Krieger wrote:
I'm trying to figure out how to [build] a solar light
(I have a market for stained-glass solar lights and,[...]
(note that I'm a crafts person, not an electronics person
Like most people who find themselves
attacked from behind by a wild hare,
it appears you haven't actually thought this through.
The first step in a project is writing a specification.
Don't take it like if I would think this place is meant for peoples to laugh
their ass off on peoples who literally started their post with "I'm a newbie
and I need help" but I tend to take for this poor guy who, luckilly wasn't
stuck his head down in a wrecked car on the roadside providing the kind of
introduction you gave him.
-- Now to that guy. The best way to learn not to put salt in your eyes is to
know how bad it hurts -- Google your way to some electronic plans on solar
NiCD chargers, light sensors and how to do that switching. You'll get parts
for about $5 to $10 off eBay. Get a few different solar panels, a few
different kinds of leds and do the tests. Doing the maths is cool, but some
peoples did them and they're selling their product to walmart for about 3$
each because it literally sucks. Some think that they can get it right on
paper, never test anything, start the production based on theories and get
poor results.
Do your tests, find the right leds type and quantity for the illumination
you want and start from there.
;-)
Will the lights come on automatically?
Are you going to use *multiple* LEDs in each one?
Have you selected a LED to use?
Do you understand the arithmetic involved with LEDs?
Once you understand how *those* part work
and can put some actual NUMBERS to your requirements,
then you can move on the *battery* part and the arithmetic there.
On that front, it seems foolish for a complete rookie
to try to *build* something that he can buy as a complete unit.
http://www.google.com/products?q=intitle:Solar+intitle:Battery-Charger&scoring=p&price=between&price1=1&num=100
You certainly won't be able to do it cheaper
than the pros who build them in large quantities.