Thread: inductive?
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Bill Wright[_3_] Bill Wright[_3_] is offline
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Default inductive?

On 24/11/2019 11:46, Jeff Layman wrote:
On 24/11/19 10:48, charles wrote:
In article ,
Â*Â*Â* Jeff Layman wrote:
On 24/11/19 04:18, Bill Wright wrote:
I want to put some LED lights on my sliding gate. I wondered if I could
power them inductively, with a power 'transmitter' fixed to the
gatepost
and a power 'receiver' on the gate, positioned so when the gate's shut
they are close together and the LEDs come on. The power requirement of
the lights is 24W at 12VDC. The positional accuracy of the gate is
good.

Bill


Have you considered whether or not ultraflexible wire might be suitable?
Such as:
https://www.amazon.co.uk/BNTECHGO-Silicone-Flexible-Strands-Stranded/dp/B01C5DBKW6/ref=pd_sim_60_7?_encoding=UTF8&pd_rd_i=B01C5DBKW6& pd_rd_r=7ab77a56-bb0a-4039-b629-0fa1c8b13a41&pd_rd_w=BSR9P&pd_rd_wg=uNhTl&pf_rd_p= 6a30fab2-6ed5-4400-920a-f4b0f59e4ff9&pf_rd_r=T3B1NZZ9C076EZM52RTQ&psc=1&re fRID=T3B1NZZ9C076EZM52RTQ


Just out of interest, why do you need the leds to be so bright? Leds
using 24W would produce give thousand lumens. If you need that light
level, why not have them fixed on posts?


It's not 24w per led. It's 24w in total


I know. That still equates to a couple of thousand lumens assuming
around 80 lumens/w for a typical "domestic" led.

It's spread across 7 metres remember.

Bill