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products:ledstrip:index.html [2010/11/09 21:23]
ladyada
products:ledstrip:index.html [2016/01/28 18:05] (current)
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 We love some good LED blinking as much as the next person but after years of LED-soldering we need something cooler to get us excited. Sure there are RGB LEDs and those are fun too but what comes after that? Well, we have the answer: **LED Strips**! These are __flexible__ circuit boards with full color LEDs soldered on. They take a lot of LED-wiring-drudgery out of decorating a room, car, bicycle, costume, etc. The ones we carry are also waterproof (although not all are). We love some good LED blinking as much as the next person but after years of LED-soldering we need something cooler to get us excited. Sure there are RGB LEDs and those are fun too but what comes after that? Well, we have the answer: **LED Strips**! These are __flexible__ circuit boards with full color LEDs soldered on. They take a lot of LED-wiring-drudgery out of decorating a room, car, bicycle, costume, etc. The ones we carry are also waterproof (although not all are).
  
-There are two basic kinds of LED strips, the "​analog"​ kind and "​digital"​ kind. Analog-type strips have all the LEDs connected in parallel and so it acts like one huge tri-color LED; you can set the **entire** strip to any color you wan, but you can't control the individual LED's colors. They are very very easy to use and fairly inexpensive.+There are two basic kinds of LED strips, the "​analog"​ kind and "​digital"​ kind. Analog-type strips have all the LEDs connected in parallel and so it acts like one huge tri-color LED; you can set the **entire** strip to any color you want, but you can't control the individual LED's colors. They are very very easy to use and fairly inexpensive.
  
 The Digital-type strips work in a different way. They have a chip for each LED, to use the strip you have to send digitally coded data to the chips. However, this means you can control each LED individually! Because of the extra complexity of the chip, they are more expensive. The Digital-type strips work in a different way. They have a chip for each LED, to use the strip you have to send digitally coded data to the chips. However, this means you can control each LED individually! Because of the extra complexity of the chip, they are more expensive.
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 To find the total maximum current draw per meter, we would multiply 60mA x 10 (ten segments per meter) = 0.6 Amps per meter. Again, that's assuming you would have all the LEDs on at once and that you are powering it from 12V. If you're going to be PWM-fading between colors, maybe 1/2 of that is what you'll be drawing. Still, you do need to have a fairly decent power supply to run this strip, all those LEDs add up! To find the total maximum current draw per meter, we would multiply 60mA x 10 (ten segments per meter) = 0.6 Amps per meter. Again, that's assuming you would have all the LEDs on at once and that you are powering it from 12V. If you're going to be PWM-fading between colors, maybe 1/2 of that is what you'll be drawing. Still, you do need to have a fairly decent power supply to run this strip, all those LEDs add up!
 +
 +===== Wiring =====
 +
 +Connecting up to the strip is fairly easy, you'll want to solder four wires to the copper tabs. We'll use white for +12V, then red, green and blue wires for the corresponding LED colors.
 +
 +{{  :​products:​ledstrip:​astripend_t.jpg ​ |:​products:​ledstrip:​astripend.jpg}}
 +
 +Cut away the waterproof overmolding at one end of the strip. The strips are symmetric so it doesn'​t matter which end you use
 +
 +{{  :​products:​ledstrip:​astripcut_t.jpg ​ |:​products:​ledstrip:​astripcut.jpg}}
 +
 +Scrape away the rubber to expose the copper pads
 +
 +{{  :​products:​ledstrip:​astripscraped_t.jpg ​ |:​products:​ledstrip:​astripscraped.jpg}}
 +
 +Melt some solder onto the pads to tin them and also burn away any left over rubber ​
 +
 +{{  :​products:​ledstrip:​astriptin_t.jpg ​ |:​products:​ledstrip:​astriptin_t.jpg}}
 +
 +Solder the four wires on. We used stranded wire, which is more flexible and is probably a better choice than solid-core
 +
 +{{  :​products:​ledstrip:​solderred_t.jpg ​ |}}
 +
 +{{  :​products:​ledstrip:​wires_t.jpg ​ |:​products:​ledstrip:​wires.jpg}}
 +
 +To protect the wires and maintain some waterproofness,​ you can use heatshrink.
 +
 +{{  :​products:​ledstrip:​heatshrink_t.jpg ​ |:​products:​ledstrip:​heatshrink.jpg}}
 +
 +{{  :​products:​ledstrip:​heatshrunk_t.jpg ​ |:​products:​ledstrip:​heatshrunk.jpg}}
  
  
-====== "​Digital"​ RGB LED strips ====== 
  
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