Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
![]() |
|
Home Repair (alt.home.repair) For all homeowners and DIYers with many experienced tradesmen. Solve your toughest home fix-it problems. |
Reply |
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
![]()
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I'm seeing more LED lightbulbs turning up on store shelves.
I don't think I've seen one yet that is ok to use with a dimmer switch. I can understand why CFL's can't be put on a dimmer - but why not LED bulbs? They're crazy-priced as is. Not being able to dim them makes them even less desirable as a replacement for incandescent bulbs. |
#2
![]()
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Dec 24, 1:54*am, Home Guy wrote:
I'm seeing more LED lightbulbs turning up on store shelves. I don't think I've seen one yet that is ok to use with a dimmer switch. I can understand why CFL's can't be put on a dimmer - but why not LED bulbs? They're crazy-priced as is. *Not being able to dim them makes them even less desirable as a replacement for incandescent bulbs. THEY ARE LAZY... THE DESIGNERS USE THE WRONG SCR FOR WAVEFORM RECTIFICATION, AT HIGH FREQUENCY IN WHICH CFL's WORK TRIMMIMG THE INPUT WAVE IN BOTH VOLTAGE AND CURRENT RESULTS IN FLICKERING. THE RIGHT ELECTRONIC DESIGN COMPONETS WOULD CORRECT AND PREVENT THATNFLAW. AS FOR THE LED's , THE SAME APPLIES IT IS NOT TOO DIFICULT TO REDUCE THE AC INPUT WITHOUT CHANGING THE FREQUENCY....THIS CAN BE ACCOMPLOSHED USING A CLAMPER IN THE IC INSTEAD OF A CLIPPER CIRCUIT. EASY AS PUMKIN HEAD I MEAN, PIE. THERE MUST BE GOLD IN THEM THERE HILLS (:/) PATECUM |
#3
![]()
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Home Guy wrote:
I'm seeing more LED lightbulbs turning up on store shelves. I don't think I've seen one yet that is ok to use with a dimmer switch. I can understand why CFL's can't be put on a dimmer - but why not LED bulbs? This is new, last 3 years. They had to develop a ballast that was adjustable. CFL's and LEDS are not a good comparison. They're crazy-priced as is. Not being able to dim them makes them even less desirable as a replacement for incandescent bulbs. L.E.D.S. Are going to difficult (impossible) to dim. Remember they are DIODES that only need .7V to illuminate. AFAIK --- LED's are not dim-able. |
#4
![]()
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 12/24/2010 1:54 AM, Home Guy wrote:
I'm seeing more LED lightbulbs turning up on store shelves. I don't think I've seen one yet that is ok to use with a dimmer switch. I haven't really been following, but I was in the borg last night and they now have quite a few. I noticed, right on the box, of at least one "Dimmable". There is little reason why not, unless flicker related. YMMV I can understand why CFL's can't be put on a dimmer - but why not LED bulbs? They're crazy-priced as is. Getting better. I was looking at bulbs priced in the teens. I seem to recall prices 3 times higher not long ago. But I'm no expert. Wound up buying a CFL that looked just light a regular bulb (for $4), with glass all the way to the screw. Got one floor lamp that a regular CFL won't screw in. Jeff Not being able to dim them makes them even less desirable as a replacement for incandescent bulbs. |
#5
![]()
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Dec 24, 7:28*am, Jeff Thies wrote:
On 12/24/2010 1:54 AM, Home Guy wrote: I'm seeing more LED lightbulbs turning up on store shelves. I don't think I've seen one yet that is ok to use with a dimmer switch. * I haven't really been following, but I was in the borg last night and they now have quite a few. I noticed, right on the box, of at least one "Dimmable". There is little reason why not, unless flicker related. YMMV I can understand why CFL's can't be put on a dimmer - but why not LED bulbs? They're crazy-priced as is. Getting better. I was looking at bulbs priced in the teens. I seem to recall prices 3 times higher not long ago. But I'm no expert. * *Wound up buying a CFL that looked just light a regular bulb (for $4), with glass all the way to the screw. Got one floor lamp that a regular CFL won't screw in. * *Jeff * *Not being able to dim them makes them even less desirable as a replacement for incandescent bulbs. EVENTUALLY THEY SHOULD COMPLY WITH DEMAND.IN-THE-MEANTIME.THERE IS NO FOUL IN KEEPING DIMMERS AND USING INCANDESCENT WHERE YOU WISH, THEY STILL WARM THE HEART AND GIVE OFF SUITABLE ILLUMINATION. PATECUM |
#6
![]()
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Jeff Thies wrote in
: On 12/24/2010 1:54 AM, Home Guy wrote: I'm seeing more LED lightbulbs turning up on store shelves. I don't think I've seen one yet that is ok to use with a dimmer switch. I haven't really been following, but I was in the borg last night and they now have quite a few. I noticed, right on the box, of at least one "Dimmable". There is little reason why not, unless flicker related. YMMV I can understand why CFL's can't be put on a dimmer - but why not LED bulbs? They're crazy-priced as is. Getting better. I was looking at bulbs priced in the teens. I seem to recall prices 3 times higher not long ago. But I'm no expert. Wound up buying a CFL that looked just light a regular bulb (for $4), with glass all the way to the screw. Got one floor lamp that a regular CFL won't screw in. Jeff Not being able to dim them makes them even less desirable as a replacement for incandescent bulbs. LEDs are CONSTANT CURRENT-driven,not voltage driven. they have to have some sort of current regulator inside that keeps the current constant regardless of input voltate swings. To dim a LED,you would have to vary the input current,and the typical triac lamp dimmers don't do that,they vary input voltage. Plus,there's a fairly narrow range of current that produces light from the LED chip,it's not linear.Most LED dimming schemes pulse modulate the LED,changing the duty cycle of the current,and the eye averages the output. you get better efficiency that way,but it's more complex electronically. -- Jim Yanik jyanik at localnet dot com |
#7
![]()
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 12/24/2010 07:25 AM, G. Morgan wrote:
Home wrote: I'm seeing more LED lightbulbs turning up on store shelves. I don't think I've seen one yet that is ok to use with a dimmer switch. I can understand why CFL's can't be put on a dimmer - but why not LED bulbs? This is new, last 3 years. They had to develop a ballast that was adjustable. CFL's and LEDS are not a good comparison. They're crazy-priced as is. Not being able to dim them makes them even less desirable as a replacement for incandescent bulbs. L.E.D.S. Are going to difficult (impossible) to dim. Remember they are DIODES that only need .7V to illuminate. AFAIK --- LED's are not dim-able. sure they are, I had a LED dash light kit in my old 944. It didn't dim linearly like the incandescents though, so a slightly different dimmer would be required. I thin kthe difficulty is with dimming with AC. nate -- replace "roosters" with "cox" to reply. http://members.cox.net/njnagel |
#8
![]()
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]() EVENTUALLY THEY SHOULD COMPLY WITH DEMAND.IN-THE-MEANTIME.THERE IS NO FOUL IN KEEPING DIMMERS AND USING INCANDESCENT WHERE YOU WISH, THEY STILL WARM THE HEART AND GIVE OFF SUITABLE ILLUMINATION. PATECUM Yo.... Ghosty.... caps lock. Don't need to shout here. |
#9
![]()
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
G. Morgan wrote in
: Home Guy wrote: I'm seeing more LED lightbulbs turning up on store shelves. I don't think I've seen one yet that is ok to use with a dimmer switch. I can understand why CFL's can't be put on a dimmer - but why not LED bulbs? This is new, last 3 years. They had to develop a ballast that was adjustable. CFL's and LEDS are not a good comparison. They're crazy-priced as is. Not being able to dim them makes them even less desirable as a replacement for incandescent bulbs. L.E.D.S. Are going to difficult (impossible) to dim. Remember they are DIODES that only need .7V to illuminate. AFAIK --- LED's are not dim-able. I suppose you could simulate dimming by adjusting the pulse rate, the way some automakers do it with their LED tail/brake lights. But that would probably cause flickering at the lower rates. Could you simply have a dimmer illuminate more or fewer LEDs as the dimmer is turned up or down? Perhaps the voltage from the dimmer switch could be used as a signal by the LED assembly, which would interpret it as a command to turn-on or turn-off LEDs. -- Tegger |
#10
![]()
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 12/24/2010 7:56 AM, Jim Yanik wrote:
Jeff wrote in : On 12/24/2010 1:54 AM, Home Guy wrote: I'm seeing more LED lightbulbs turning up on store shelves. I don't think I've seen one yet that is ok to use with a dimmer switch. I haven't really been following, but I was in the borg last night and they now have quite a few. I noticed, right on the box, of at least one "Dimmable". There is little reason why not, unless flicker related. YMMV I can understand why CFL's can't be put on a dimmer - but why not LED bulbs? They're crazy-priced as is. Getting better. I was looking at bulbs priced in the teens. I seem to recall prices 3 times higher not long ago. But I'm no expert. Wound up buying a CFL that looked just light a regular bulb (for $4), with glass all the way to the screw. Got one floor lamp that a regular CFL won't screw in. Jeff Not being able to dim them makes them even less desirable as a replacement for incandescent bulbs. LEDs are CONSTANT CURRENT-driven,not voltage driven. they have to have some sort of current regulator inside that keeps the current constant regardless of input voltate swings. To dim a LED,you would have to vary the input current,and the typical triac lamp dimmers don't do that,they vary input voltage. Plus,there's a fairly narrow range of current that produces light from the LED chip,it's not linear.Most LED dimming schemes pulse modulate the LED,changing the duty cycle of the current,and the eye averages the output. you get better efficiency that way,but it's more complex electronically. One of the things that makes LEDs "harder" to dim is that they dim linearly with current. Normally this would be a nice thing, however present dimmers are made for traditional bulbs. Filament bulbs dim very non linearly with voltage. LEDs typically will have some sort of series limiting resistance, but the idea is to have as little series resistance as possible, to cut down on wasted power in the resistor. Pulse width dimming, as in car tail lights, is the obvious answer. But, I think they should up the frequency of said tail lights and future house lights dimming circuits, to prevent the strobing effect you see when you turn your head rapidly. Some people don't even notice it, but some do. |
#11
![]()
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Nate Nagel wrote:
sure they are, I had a LED dash light kit in my old 944. It didn't dim linearly like the incandescents though, so a slightly different dimmer would be required. I thin kthe difficulty is with dimming with AC. Diodes have two states, off and on. I couldn't see a practical way to dim them, without fooling the brain by frequency of the light. That won't work well either, I may be able to see 3000 fps with my eyes, but you would need a high-speed camera and light to control constantly changing lighting environments. You probably had an adjustable current device potentiometer that would limit DC current... That would explain the non-linear aspect side of the theory. Perhaps there were more LED's that you knew about. I could easily see Porsche make a multi-diode lamp. |
#12
![]()
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "G. Morgan" wrote in message ... Nate Nagel wrote: sure they are, I had a LED dash light kit in my old 944. It didn't dim linearly like the incandescents though, so a slightly different dimmer would be required. I thin kthe difficulty is with dimming with AC. Diodes have two states, off and on. I couldn't see a practical way to dim them, without fooling the brain by frequency of the light. That won't work well either, I may be able to see 3000 fps with my eyes, but you would need a high-speed camera and light to control constantly changing lighting environments. You probably had an adjustable current device potentiometer that would limit DC current... That would explain the non-linear aspect side of the theory. Perhaps there were more LED's that you knew about. I could easily see Porsche make a multi-diode lamp. You need to do more research on diodes, especially the LED types. They do not have two states like you mentioned. They are non linear devices. Also LED are not dropping .7 volts as you mentioned. The .7 volts is a nominal voltage for most silicon diodes only. Most LEDs drop differant voltages. They range from about 1.5 to 4.5 volts. LEDs are current dependant and not so much voltage. The more current through them, the brighter they are. The current must be limiated to prevent burn out. If a resistor is placed in series with a led, the voltage can be raised and lowered to change the brightness. This is because the resistor is in part controlling the current. They can be pulse controled also. The human eye is not fast enough to respond to fast changing lights. It will tend to average the brightness. That is the way the moving pictuers work. |
#13
![]()
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 12/24/2010 7:56 AM, Jim Yanik wrote:
Jeff wrote in : On 12/24/2010 1:54 AM, Home Guy wrote: I'm seeing more LED lightbulbs turning up on store shelves. I don't think I've seen one yet that is ok to use with a dimmer switch. I haven't really been following, but I was in the borg last night and they now have quite a few. I noticed, right on the box, of at least one "Dimmable". There is little reason why not, unless flicker related. YMMV I can understand why CFL's can't be put on a dimmer - but why not LED bulbs? They're crazy-priced as is. Getting better. I was looking at bulbs priced in the teens. I seem to recall prices 3 times higher not long ago. But I'm no expert. Wound up buying a CFL that looked just light a regular bulb (for $4), with glass all the way to the screw. Got one floor lamp that a regular CFL won't screw in. Jeff Not being able to dim them makes them even less desirable as a replacement for incandescent bulbs. LEDs are CONSTANT CURRENT-driven,not voltage driven. they have to have some sort of current regulator inside that keeps the current constant regardless of input voltate swings. To dim a LED,you would have to vary the input current,and the typical triac lamp dimmers don't do that,they vary input voltage. I hadn't thought about this, but aren't light dimmers just varying the fraction of a half wave (pulse width)? It would seem to me that it should work with LEDs (although not particularly well) but I don't know what circuitry is in an LED light. I think the key is how the current source is constructed. Limiting the power lost there is important. Can you shed any light on just what is in an LED lamp? I'm curious now. I figured a wee chopper with a bit of output filtering. Add a resistor or a constant current configured transistor. Just speculating. Plus,there's a fairly narrow range of current that produces light from the LED chip,it's not linear.Most LED dimming schemes pulse modulate the LED, Is that a household type dimmer like on the wall? changing the duty cycle of the current,and the eye averages the output. you get better efficiency that way,but it's more complex electronically. For the money they are, they can throw a little circuitry at it! Chopping up DC is no big deal these days. With the low current drawn and high voltage, I wouldn't think it would need a very large cap. I have no practical knowledge of this, so I'll defer to those with more experience. Jeff |
#14
![]()
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Fri, 24 Dec 2010 12:11:20 -0500, Jeff Thies wrote:
On 12/24/2010 7:56 AM, Jim Yanik wrote: Jeff wrote in : On 12/24/2010 1:54 AM, Home Guy wrote: I'm seeing more LED lightbulbs turning up on store shelves. I don't think I've seen one yet that is ok to use with a dimmer switch. I haven't really been following, but I was in the borg last night and they now have quite a few. I noticed, right on the box, of at least one "Dimmable". There is little reason why not, unless flicker related. YMMV I can understand why CFL's can't be put on a dimmer - but why not LED bulbs? They're crazy-priced as is. Getting better. I was looking at bulbs priced in the teens. I seem to recall prices 3 times higher not long ago. But I'm no expert. Wound up buying a CFL that looked just light a regular bulb (for $4), with glass all the way to the screw. Got one floor lamp that a regular CFL won't screw in. Jeff Not being able to dim them makes them even less desirable as a replacement for incandescent bulbs. LEDs are CONSTANT CURRENT-driven,not voltage driven. they have to have some sort of current regulator inside that keeps the current constant regardless of input voltate swings. To dim a LED,you would have to vary the input current,and the typical triac lamp dimmers don't do that,they vary input voltage. I hadn't thought about this, but aren't light dimmers just varying the fraction of a half wave (pulse width)? It would seem to me that it should work with LEDs (although not particularly well) but I don't know what circuitry is in an LED light. Yes, you are correct, except that the LEDs have to have a "threshold"[*] voltage to light at all. If the dimmer is triggered when the AC (sine wave) is too low the LEDs don't light. The range of adjustment will be very small. [*]as others have pointed out, this isn't an on/off thing but is highly nonlinear I think the key is how the current source is constructed. Limiting the power lost there is important. Yes, this is a very expensive thing to do, compared to a *cheap* Triac dimmer. Can you shed any light on just what is in an LED lamp? I'm curious now. I figured a wee chopper with a bit of output filtering. Add a resistor or a constant current configured transistor. Just speculating. You'd have to make a DC source, which won't be cheap because of the sine-wave input. The source will have to store energy for the cycle. Plus,there's a fairly narrow range of current that produces light from the LED chip,it's not linear.Most LED dimming schemes pulse modulate the LED, Is that a household type dimmer like on the wall? No, they adjust the (phase) angle of a triac firing. This controls the power put into a resistive load just fine but doesn't work for a highly non-linear load like a (long) string of diodes. changing the duty cycle of the current,and the eye averages the output. you get better efficiency that way,but it's more complex electronically. For the money they are, they can throw a little circuitry at it! Chopping up DC is no big deal these days. With the low current drawn and high voltage, I wouldn't think it would need a very large cap. Right. But you don't have DC to chop. ;-) Making the DC isn't all that cheap (or efficient). I have no practical knowledge of this, so I'll defer to those with more experience. |
#15
![]()
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#16
![]()
Posted to alt.home.repair,misc.consumers.frugal-living
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 12/24/2010 12:50 PM, zzzzzzzzzz wrote:
On Fri, 24 Dec 2010 12:11:20 -0500, Jeff wrote: On 12/24/2010 7:56 AM, Jim Yanik wrote: Jeff wrote in : On 12/24/2010 1:54 AM, Home Guy wrote: I'm seeing more LED lightbulbs turning up on store shelves. I don't think I've seen one yet that is ok to use with a dimmer switch. I haven't really been following, but I was in the borg last night and they now have quite a few. I noticed, right on the box, of at least one "Dimmable". There is little reason why not, unless flicker related. Hey Don, What do you know about what circuitry is in the commercial LED lamps and dimming compatibility. For those who don't know, Don Klipstein knows more about lighting than anyone I know of: http://members.misty.com/don/ledx.html We'll see if he is around and interested. Jeff YMMV |
#17
![]()
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Fri, 24 Dec 2010 06:25:05 -0600, G. Morgan
wrote: Home Guy wrote: I'm seeing more LED lightbulbs turning up on store shelves. I don't think I've seen one yet that is ok to use with a dimmer switch. I can understand why CFL's can't be put on a dimmer - but why not LED bulbs? This is new, last 3 years. They had to develop a ballast that was adjustable. CFL's and LEDS are not a good comparison. They're crazy-priced as is. Not being able to dim them makes them even less desirable as a replacement for incandescent bulbs. L.E.D.S. Are going to difficult (impossible) to dim. Remember they are DIODES that only need .7V to illuminate. AFAIK --- LED's are not dim-able. Try 3. something volts to light a white LED. The only way to "dim" LEDs is to PWM them with variable pulse width/duty cycle. The dimming range is quite narrow. The same can be done for "overdriving" an LED. Shourt duration pulses can significantly increase the visible light output without overheating the junction. |
#18
![]()
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#20
![]()
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Fri, 24 Dec 2010 15:32:11 -0600, "
wrote: On Fri, 24 Dec 2010 15:02:02 -0500, wrote: On Fri, 24 Dec 2010 06:25:05 -0600, G. Morgan wrote: Home Guy wrote: I'm seeing more LED lightbulbs turning up on store shelves. I don't think I've seen one yet that is ok to use with a dimmer switch. I can understand why CFL's can't be put on a dimmer - but why not LED bulbs? This is new, last 3 years. They had to develop a ballast that was adjustable. CFL's and LEDS are not a good comparison. They're crazy-priced as is. Not being able to dim them makes them even less desirable as a replacement for incandescent bulbs. L.E.D.S. Are going to difficult (impossible) to dim. Remember they are DIODES that only need .7V to illuminate. AFAIK --- LED's are not dim-able. Try 3. something volts to light a white LED. The only way to "dim" LEDs is to PWM them with variable pulse width/duty cycle. The dimming range is quite narrow. Not true at all. Using PWM, or a variable current, you can get a very substantial dimming range (with less change in color than an incandescent). It's just a PITA and a phase-control (Triac) wall dimmer ain't going to do it. The same can be done for "overdriving" an LED. Shourt duration pulses can significantly increase the visible light output without overheating the junction. No, it doesn't increase the light output at all. You may be able to see it with less output because a flashing light catches the eye, but as long as it's a "constant" light output (i.e. not visibly blinking) the light output of an LED is pretty much a linear function of the *average* current through it. Flashing of an LEDm above the eye's critical fusion frequency does not increase efficiency, rather the opposite. The efficiency of an LED goes down, at high currents, as it heats. MANY high output led applications are pulsed "overdrive" applications, and believe me, they DO put out a LOT more light.Driving them steady at those currents would blow them in a matter of minutes, but pulsed at 15-20% duty cycle at up to 4 or 5 times rated current they still deliver almost rated lifespan, and, if I remember correctly,over 5 times the rated light output. |
#21
![]()
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Fri, 24 Dec 2010 18:24:52 -0500, wrote:
On Fri, 24 Dec 2010 15:32:11 -0600, " wrote: On Fri, 24 Dec 2010 15:02:02 -0500, wrote: On Fri, 24 Dec 2010 06:25:05 -0600, G. Morgan wrote: Home Guy wrote: I'm seeing more LED lightbulbs turning up on store shelves. I don't think I've seen one yet that is ok to use with a dimmer switch. I can understand why CFL's can't be put on a dimmer - but why not LED bulbs? This is new, last 3 years. They had to develop a ballast that was adjustable. CFL's and LEDS are not a good comparison. They're crazy-priced as is. Not being able to dim them makes them even less desirable as a replacement for incandescent bulbs. L.E.D.S. Are going to difficult (impossible) to dim. Remember they are DIODES that only need .7V to illuminate. AFAIK --- LED's are not dim-able. Try 3. something volts to light a white LED. The only way to "dim" LEDs is to PWM them with variable pulse width/duty cycle. The dimming range is quite narrow. Not true at all. Using PWM, or a variable current, you can get a very substantial dimming range (with less change in color than an incandescent). It's just a PITA and a phase-control (Triac) wall dimmer ain't going to do it. The same can be done for "overdriving" an LED. Shourt duration pulses can significantly increase the visible light output without overheating the junction. No, it doesn't increase the light output at all. You may be able to see it with less output because a flashing light catches the eye, but as long as it's a "constant" light output (i.e. not visibly blinking) the light output of an LED is pretty much a linear function of the *average* current through it. Flashing of an LEDm above the eye's critical fusion frequency does not increase efficiency, rather the opposite. The efficiency of an LED goes down, at high currents, as it heats. MANY high output led applications are pulsed "overdrive" applications, and believe me, they DO put out a LOT more light. No, they don't, for any reasonable reading of that sentence. The physics doesn't allow it (the opposite, in fact). Driving them steady at those currents would blow them in a matter of minutes, but pulsed at 15-20% duty cycle at up to 4 or 5 times rated current they still deliver almost rated lifespan, and, if I remember correctly,over 5 times the rated light output. The *average* current is all that matters. The average also does the heating, so it's a no win to pulse them, other than it's the easier way to dim them. |
#22
![]()
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Dec 24, 11:50*am, "
wrote: Yes, you are correct, except that the LEDs have to have a "threshold"[*] voltage to light at all. *If the dimmer is triggered when the AC (sine wave) is too low the LEDs don't light. *The range of adjustment will be very small. [*]as others have pointed out, this isn't an on/off thing but is highly nonlinear * I think the key is how the current source is constructed. Limiting the power lost there is important. Yes, this is a very expensive thing to do, compared to a *cheap* Triac dimmer. Note: http://joby.com/store/gorillatorch/switchback Joby makes several models of quality dimmable LED lights, but as you said they are not cheap. The one in the link will dim thru a range of 5 - 130 lumens, mostly linear and without flicker. I have one and it works great. I have no idea of the circuitry they use to dim the LED and I'm not going to take it apart to find out. This response is just to let the doubters know that the technology to dim LED's is real and available. Red |
#23
![]()
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Fri, 24 Dec 2010 17:06:06 -0800 (PST), Red wrote:
On Dec 24, 11:50*am, " wrote: Yes, you are correct, except that the LEDs have to have a "threshold"[*] voltage to light at all. *If the dimmer is triggered when the AC (sine wave) is too low the LEDs don't light. *The range of adjustment will be very small. [*]as others have pointed out, this isn't an on/off thing but is highly nonlinear * I think the key is how the current source is constructed. Limiting the power lost there is important. Yes, this is a very expensive thing to do, compared to a *cheap* Triac dimmer. Note: http://joby.com/store/gorillatorch/switchback Joby makes several models of quality dimmable LED lights, but as you said they are not cheap. The one in the link will dim thru a range of 5 - 130 lumens, mostly linear and without flicker. I have one and it works great. I have no idea of the circuitry they use to dim the LED and I'm not going to take it apart to find out. This response is just to let the doubters know that the technology to dim LED's is real and available. Sure dimming LEDs is possible, and actually not all that hard if you start with DC (the unit you linked is battery powered). Doing it from the AC line, cheaply and efficiently, is more challenging. It's easy to do sloppily, but then there is no gain over an incandescent bulb. |
#24
![]()
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Fri, 24 Dec 2010 17:35:37 -0600, "
wrote: On Fri, 24 Dec 2010 18:24:52 -0500, wrote: On Fri, 24 Dec 2010 15:32:11 -0600, " wrote: On Fri, 24 Dec 2010 15:02:02 -0500, wrote: On Fri, 24 Dec 2010 06:25:05 -0600, G. Morgan wrote: Home Guy wrote: I'm seeing more LED lightbulbs turning up on store shelves. I don't think I've seen one yet that is ok to use with a dimmer switch. I can understand why CFL's can't be put on a dimmer - but why not LED bulbs? This is new, last 3 years. They had to develop a ballast that was adjustable. CFL's and LEDS are not a good comparison. They're crazy-priced as is. Not being able to dim them makes them even less desirable as a replacement for incandescent bulbs. L.E.D.S. Are going to difficult (impossible) to dim. Remember they are DIODES that only need .7V to illuminate. AFAIK --- LED's are not dim-able. Try 3. something volts to light a white LED. The only way to "dim" LEDs is to PWM them with variable pulse width/duty cycle. The dimming range is quite narrow. Not true at all. Using PWM, or a variable current, you can get a very substantial dimming range (with less change in color than an incandescent). It's just a PITA and a phase-control (Triac) wall dimmer ain't going to do it. The same can be done for "overdriving" an LED. Shourt duration pulses can significantly increase the visible light output without overheating the junction. No, it doesn't increase the light output at all. You may be able to see it with less output because a flashing light catches the eye, but as long as it's a "constant" light output (i.e. not visibly blinking) the light output of an LED is pretty much a linear function of the *average* current through it. Flashing of an LEDm above the eye's critical fusion frequency does not increase efficiency, rather the opposite. The efficiency of an LED goes down, at high currents, as it heats. MANY high output led applications are pulsed "overdrive" applications, and believe me, they DO put out a LOT more light. No, they don't, for any reasonable reading of that sentence. The physics doesn't allow it (the opposite, in fact). Driving them steady at those currents would blow them in a matter of minutes, but pulsed at 15-20% duty cycle at up to 4 or 5 times rated current they still deliver almost rated lifespan, and, if I remember correctly,over 5 times the rated light output. The *average* current is all that matters. The average also does the heating, so it's a no win to pulse them, other than it's the easier way to dim them. As usual you are not "completely right". I won't argue and say you are wrong in your assertions - but my UNDERSTANDING is that PEAK current controlls the visible light output, and average current affects lifespan (due to junction heating). It is not totally linear. My experience is obviously different than yours. As in many other cases, I need to say that just because you haven't seen it, don't make it wrong or impossible. Just means your scope is too narrow. See: http://www.gardasoft.com/uploads/APP...ing%20LEDs.pdf also http://www.lunaraccents.com/educational-LED-driver.html and http://www.light-speed-tech.com/ltleds.htm and http://www.optoiq.com/index/machine-...intensity.html and http://www.gardasoft.co.uk/ and http://www.smartvisionlights.com/pro...erdrive-series and http://www.freepatentsonline.com/7639219.html and http://www.parameter.se/products/Def...D3=142&ID4=155 Are just a very few references for you to look at (commercial applications of) pulsed overdrive applications for high luminence LED applications. |
#25
![]()
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Dec 24, 9:01*am, Nate Nagel wrote:
On 12/24/2010 07:25 AM, G. Morgan wrote: Home *wrote: I'm seeing more LED lightbulbs turning up on store shelves. I don't think I've seen one yet that is ok to use with a dimmer switch.. I can understand why CFL's can't be put on a dimmer - but why not LED bulbs? This is new, last 3 years. *They had to develop a ballast that was adjustable. *CFL's and LEDS are not a good comparison. They're crazy-priced as is. *Not being able to dim them makes them even less desirable as a replacement for incandescent bulbs. L.E.D.S. Are going to difficult (impossible) to dim. *Remember they are DIODES that only need .7V *to illuminate. *AFAIK --- LED's are not dim-able. sure they are, I had a LED dash light kit in my old 944. *It didn't dim linearly like the incandescents though, so a slightly different dimmer would be required. *I thin kthe difficulty is with dimming with AC. nate -- replace "roosters" with "cox" to reply.http://members.cox.net/njnagel- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - LEDs arent dimable in the normal since of the word. The current to them can be pulse width modulated to produce what we percive as a dimming of the light. This is accomplished by switching the diode off and on at a high enough rate that our eyes cant see the flicker. Dimming is controled by changing the ratio of off to on time. You may have noticed that LED Christmas tree light are a good bit dimmer than the typical LED lamp found on an appliance like the computer you are working at now. This is because the computer supplies a constant DC voltage and the LED is on 100% of the time while the Christmas tree lights are powered by a varying AC voltage that will only turn them on for about 40% of the time. |
#26
![]()
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sat, 25 Dec 2010 13:30:47 -0500, wrote:
On Fri, 24 Dec 2010 17:35:37 -0600, " wrote: On Fri, 24 Dec 2010 18:24:52 -0500, wrote: On Fri, 24 Dec 2010 15:32:11 -0600, " wrote: On Fri, 24 Dec 2010 15:02:02 -0500, wrote: On Fri, 24 Dec 2010 06:25:05 -0600, G. Morgan wrote: Home Guy wrote: I'm seeing more LED lightbulbs turning up on store shelves. I don't think I've seen one yet that is ok to use with a dimmer switch. I can understand why CFL's can't be put on a dimmer - but why not LED bulbs? This is new, last 3 years. They had to develop a ballast that was adjustable. CFL's and LEDS are not a good comparison. They're crazy-priced as is. Not being able to dim them makes them even less desirable as a replacement for incandescent bulbs. L.E.D.S. Are going to difficult (impossible) to dim. Remember they are DIODES that only need .7V to illuminate. AFAIK --- LED's are not dim-able. Try 3. something volts to light a white LED. The only way to "dim" LEDs is to PWM them with variable pulse width/duty cycle. The dimming range is quite narrow. Not true at all. Using PWM, or a variable current, you can get a very substantial dimming range (with less change in color than an incandescent). It's just a PITA and a phase-control (Triac) wall dimmer ain't going to do it. The same can be done for "overdriving" an LED. Shourt duration pulses can significantly increase the visible light output without overheating the junction. No, it doesn't increase the light output at all. You may be able to see it with less output because a flashing light catches the eye, but as long as it's a "constant" light output (i.e. not visibly blinking) the light output of an LED is pretty much a linear function of the *average* current through it. Flashing of an LEDm above the eye's critical fusion frequency does not increase efficiency, rather the opposite. The efficiency of an LED goes down, at high currents, as it heats. MANY high output led applications are pulsed "overdrive" applications, and believe me, they DO put out a LOT more light. No, they don't, for any reasonable reading of that sentence. The physics doesn't allow it (the opposite, in fact). Driving them steady at those currents would blow them in a matter of minutes, but pulsed at 15-20% duty cycle at up to 4 or 5 times rated current they still deliver almost rated lifespan, and, if I remember correctly,over 5 times the rated light output. The *average* current is all that matters. The average also does the heating, so it's a no win to pulse them, other than it's the easier way to dim them. As usual you are not "completely right". I won't argue and say you are wrong in your assertions - but my UNDERSTANDING is that PEAK current controlls the visible light output, and average current affects lifespan (due to junction heating). It is not totally linear. Nope. Current controls the light output. Average current controls the average light (which the eye detects, integrated over the "critical fusion frequency"). Yes, peak current controls the peak light output, if you're detecting peaks, this might be important. It is certainly *not* if you're looking at it. Above the CFF, human eyes average the light intensity. Having high peaks with long spaces does *nothing* to aid perception and in fact reduces efficiency; LEDs are LESS efficient at high currents. Pulsing LEDs is a lose-lose proposition. My experience is obviously different than yours. As in many other cases, I need to say that just because you haven't seen it, don't make it wrong or impossible. Just means your scope is too narrow. No, you're just wrong. It's not the first time. See: http://www.gardasoft.com/uploads/APP...ing%20LEDs.pdf Did you actually *READ* that app note? An overdrive factor of *6* will produce only 3 times the light (efficiency drops by half). "The average current must be kept below the current rating for the LED." IOW, you can't overdrive it for long. The table "High Power LEDs" indicates that you can drive the LED up to 5x current for 2ms, with a 10% duty cycle. A 5X current you get 2.5X the light or ONE HALF the average light output as you would have gotten if you'd just driven it at 100%, DC. IOW, a loser. also http://www.lunaraccents.com/educational-LED-driver.html and http://www.light-speed-tech.com/ltleds.htm and http://www.optoiq.com/index/machine-...intensity.html and http://www.gardasoft.co.uk/ and http://www.smartvisionlights.com/pro...erdrive-series and http://www.freepatentsonline.com/7639219.html and http://www.parameter.se/products/Def...D3=142&ID4=155 Are just a very few references for you to look at (commercial applications of) pulsed overdrive applications for high luminence LED applications. As I've shown with the first article, pulsing LEDs is a loser. You're simply *WRONG*. |
#27
![]()
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sat, 25 Dec 2010 11:48:23 -0500, wrote:
On Fri, 24 Dec 2010 11:58:12 -0600, " wrote: On Fri, 24 Dec 2010 12:43:40 -0500, wrote: How do you "just vary the current" efficiently, without chopping it? It doesn't have to be a lot faster but you're right, 60Hz doesn't cut it IMO. Since the currents are so low, a rheostat may not be out of the question. Huh? Sure they are. You might just as well use incandescent lights. OK you have a string of LEDs dropping about 95% of the line voltage and a resistor dropping the rest and limiting current now. How can making that resistance more by adding a rheostat in series be more inefficient? Resistors heat == inefficient |
#28
![]()
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sat, 25 Dec 2010 11:53:35 -0500, wrote:
On Fri, 24 Dec 2010 19:12:39 -0600, " wrote: On Fri, 24 Dec 2010 17:06:06 -0800 (PST), Red wrote: On Dec 24, 11:50*am, " wrote: Yes, you are correct, except that the LEDs have to have a "threshold"[*] voltage to light at all. *If the dimmer is triggered when the AC (sine wave) is too low the LEDs don't light. *The range of adjustment will be very small. [*]as others have pointed out, this isn't an on/off thing but is highly nonlinear * I think the key is how the current source is constructed. Limiting the power lost there is important. Yes, this is a very expensive thing to do, compared to a *cheap* Triac dimmer. Note: http://joby.com/store/gorillatorch/switchback Joby makes several models of quality dimmable LED lights, but as you said they are not cheap. The one in the link will dim thru a range of 5 - 130 lumens, mostly linear and without flicker. I have one and it works great. I have no idea of the circuitry they use to dim the LED and I'm not going to take it apart to find out. This response is just to let the doubters know that the technology to dim LED's is real and available. Sure dimming LEDs is possible, and actually not all that hard if you start with DC (the unit you linked is battery powered). Doing it from the AC line, cheaply and efficiently, is more challenging. It's easy to do sloppily, but then there is no gain over an incandescent bulb. I still do not get how you arrive at that conclusion. A string of LEDS will draw 15 - 20MA at full brightness and if you increase the size of the current limiting resistor the current will drop from there in a very linear manner. Try it. You'll find that you are *very* wrong. LEDs are *not* in any way linear. You'll also find that the efficiency goes down as you lower the brightness (the resistor takes more of the line voltage). If you use a current source it works, linearly, but is no more efficient (think of the current source as a non-linear variable resistor). |
#29
![]()
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sat, 25 Dec 2010 22:26:43 -0500, wrote:
On Sat, 25 Dec 2010 19:56:44 -0600, " wrote: On Sat, 25 Dec 2010 11:48:23 -0500, wrote: On Fri, 24 Dec 2010 11:58:12 -0600, " wrote: On Fri, 24 Dec 2010 12:43:40 -0500, wrote: How do you "just vary the current" efficiently, without chopping it? It doesn't have to be a lot faster but you're right, 60Hz doesn't cut it IMO. Since the currents are so low, a rheostat may not be out of the question. Huh? Sure they are. You might just as well use incandescent lights. OK you have a string of LEDs dropping about 95% of the line voltage and a resistor dropping the rest and limiting current now. How can making that resistance more by adding a rheostat in series be more inefficient? Resistors heat == inefficient But the resistor will always be there. You are just making a bigger resistor, the current will drop and the light will dim in a vary linear way. The voltage you drop across your resistor will be the same no matter how big it is. That is not like a rheostat on an incandescent where you are changing the voltage applied todrop the filament. The voltage across the resistor *does* change. Also, P=I^2R. |
#30
![]()
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#31
![]()
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Dec 25, 10:04*pm, "
wrote: On Sat, 25 Dec 2010 11:53:35 -0500, wrote: On Fri, 24 Dec 2010 19:12:39 -0600, " wrote: On Fri, 24 Dec 2010 17:06:06 -0800 (PST), Red wrote: On Dec 24, 11:50*am, " wrote: Yes, you are correct, except that the LEDs have to have a "threshold"[*] voltage to light at all. *If the dimmer is triggered when the AC (sine wave) is too low the LEDs don't light. *The range of adjustment will be very small. [*]as others have pointed out, this isn't an on/off thing but is highly nonlinear * I think the key is how the current source is constructed. Limiting the power lost there is important. Yes, this is a very expensive thing to do, compared to a *cheap* Triac dimmer. Note:http://joby.com/store/gorillatorch/switchback Joby makes several models of quality dimmable LED lights, but as you said they are not cheap. *The one in the link will dim thru a range of 5 - 130 lumens, mostly linear and without flicker. *I have one and it works great. *I have no idea of the circuitry they use to dim the LED and I'm not going to take it apart to find out. This response is just to let the doubters know that the technology to dim LED's is real and available. Sure dimming LEDs is possible, and actually not all that hard if you start with DC (the unit you linked is battery powered). *Doing it from the AC line, cheaply and efficiently, is more challenging. *It's easy to do sloppily, but then there is no gain over an incandescent bulb. I still do not get how you arrive at that conclusion. A string of LEDS will draw 15 - 20MA at full brightness and if you increase the size of the current limiting resistor the current will drop from there in a very linear manner. Try it. *You'll find that you are *very* wrong. *LEDs are *not* in any way linear. *You'll also find that the efficiency goes down as you lower the brightness (the resistor takes more of the line voltage). If you use a current source it works, linearly, but is no more efficient (think of the current source as a non-linear variable resistor).- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Nothing linear about a diode, he should actually try ploting a curve and see how much the resistance of a diode changes as you change the current, even much more so on a series string of the things like a lamp cluster.. Also no big deal to convert to DC to run an LED they are after all diodes they will do it for you. Thats the really cheap way out . Slightly more expesive and only arguably of better design is using a match head size bridge rectifier, cost about as much as a match too. Jimmie Jimmie. |
#32
![]()
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sat, 25 Dec 2010 21:59:15 -0600, z wrote:
On Sat, 25 Dec 2010 22:29:03 -0500, wrote: On Sat, 25 Dec 2010 20:04:00 -0600, " wrote: Try it. You'll find that you are *very* wrong. LEDs are *not* in any way linear. You'll also find that the efficiency goes down as you lower the brightness (the resistor takes more of the line voltage). Why do you think the voltage across the resistor changes? Because it does? You have a certain voltage dropped across each junction and the resistor takes the rest. sorry, new netbook and keyboard/trackpad is driving me nuts No, that would assume an ideal diode. They are not ideal, the I-V curve is not a vertical line. The more diodes you put in series and the lower the voltage across the resistor, the more pronounced this becomes. From some recent work, a blue LED at about 5mA drops about 3V. At 20mA the drop is closer to 3.3V. Now, put thirty of these in a string and the difference is 10V. You only have 20V across the resistor - it's changed 50%. ...and this is quite nonlinear. The resistor is a current regulator not a voltage regulator. A resistor regulates nothing. R==V/I. If you say that I is constant because V is constant and V is constant because I is constant, you're getting nowhere. ;-). |
#33
![]()
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sat, 25 Dec 2010 20:14:45 -0800 (PST), JIMMIE
wrote: On Dec 25, 10:04*pm, " wrote: On Sat, 25 Dec 2010 11:53:35 -0500, wrote: On Fri, 24 Dec 2010 19:12:39 -0600, " wrote: On Fri, 24 Dec 2010 17:06:06 -0800 (PST), Red wrote: On Dec 24, 11:50*am, " wrote: Yes, you are correct, except that the LEDs have to have a "threshold"[*] voltage to light at all. *If the dimmer is triggered when the AC (sine wave) is too low the LEDs don't light. *The range of adjustment will be very small. [*]as others have pointed out, this isn't an on/off thing but is highly nonlinear * I think the key is how the current source is constructed. Limiting the power lost there is important. Yes, this is a very expensive thing to do, compared to a *cheap* Triac dimmer. Note:http://joby.com/store/gorillatorch/switchback Joby makes several models of quality dimmable LED lights, but as you said they are not cheap. *The one in the link will dim thru a range of 5 - 130 lumens, mostly linear and without flicker. *I have one and it works great. *I have no idea of the circuitry they use to dim the LED and I'm not going to take it apart to find out. This response is just to let the doubters know that the technology to dim LED's is real and available. Sure dimming LEDs is possible, and actually not all that hard if you start with DC (the unit you linked is battery powered). *Doing it from the AC line, cheaply and efficiently, is more challenging. *It's easy to do sloppily, but then there is no gain over an incandescent bulb. I still do not get how you arrive at that conclusion. A string of LEDS will draw 15 - 20MA at full brightness and if you increase the size of the current limiting resistor the current will drop from there in a very linear manner. Try it. *You'll find that you are *very* wrong. *LEDs are *not* in any way linear. *You'll also find that the efficiency goes down as you lower the brightness (the resistor takes more of the line voltage). If you use a current source it works, linearly, but is no more efficient (think of the current source as a non-linear variable resistor).- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Nothing linear about a diode, he should actually try ploting a curve and see how much the resistance of a diode changes as you change the current, even much more so on a series string of the things like a lamp cluster.. Also no big deal to convert to DC to run an LED they are after all diodes they will do it for you. Thats the really cheap way out . Slightly more expesive and only arguably of better design is using a match head size bridge rectifier, cost about as much as a match too. No, they are diodes, but it's not a good idea to use them as rectifiers. The reverse breakdown of LEDs is pretty poor. As you note, a bridge rectifier is cheap enough. The probelm with running them on DC is storing the energy over the cycle (filtering the DC). That isn't cheap or particularly efficient. |
#34
![]()
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sat, 25 Dec 2010 23:25:40 -0500, wrote:
On Sat, 25 Dec 2010 22:15:14 -0600, z wrote: On Sat, 25 Dec 2010 21:59:15 -0600, z wrote: On Sat, 25 Dec 2010 22:29:03 -0500, wrote: On Sat, 25 Dec 2010 20:04:00 -0600, " wrote: Try it. You'll find that you are *very* wrong. LEDs are *not* in any way linear. You'll also find that the efficiency goes down as you lower the brightness (the resistor takes more of the line voltage). Why do you think the voltage across the resistor changes? Because it does? You have a certain voltage dropped across each junction and the resistor takes the rest. sorry, new netbook and keyboard/trackpad is driving me nuts No, that would assume an ideal diode. They are not ideal, the I-V curve is not a vertical line. The more diodes you put in series and the lower the voltage across the resistor, the more pronounced this becomes. From some recent work, a blue LED at about 5mA drops about 3V. At 20mA the drop is closer to 3.3V. Now, put thirty of these in a string and the difference is 10V. You only have 20V across the resistor - it's changed 50%. ...and this is quite nonlinear. The resistor is a current regulator not a voltage regulator. A resistor regulates nothing. R==V/I. If you say that I is constant because V is constant and V is constant because I is constant, you're getting nowhere. ;-). Lets get to the bottom line. Are you trying to say a dimmed LED (by increasing the size of the resistor) draws more current than one at full brightness? Of course not. I'm saying that it is NOT LINEAR and NOT EFFICIENT. You may have a more efficient way of dimming a LED lamp but how many decades would it take to get your money back over just using a rheostat? Sometimes KISS is the best rule. A reostat is a BAD idea. The worst, in fact. It's easy enough to perform this electronically, but the results aren't good. Doing the job right is somewhat more difficult. I like doing experiments like this and I will be back as soon as my high intensity LEDs arrive because this is my plan. We will see. I have no problem admitting when I am wrong but I want to see it. Go for it. I do this stuff all the time, though with indicators, not for illumination. I just did one where I used current sources instead of resistors to eek out the last couple of tenths of a volt on the supply. It was an application where we were using red and green LEDs but the owner like blue but the product is LiIon powered so we have to operate from 3.6V to 5V (when charging we run off the input). The current source allowed a constant intensity over this range (3.6V is pushing it) while having suffiient drive at the low end. |
#35
![]()
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Dec 26, 12:27*am, wrote:
On Sat, 25 Dec 2010 20:14:45 -0800 (PST), JIMMIE wrote: On Dec 25, 10:04*pm, " wrote: On Sat, 25 Dec 2010 11:53:35 -0500, wrote: On Fri, 24 Dec 2010 19:12:39 -0600, " wrote: On Fri, 24 Dec 2010 17:06:06 -0800 (PST), Red wrote: On Dec 24, 11:50*am, " wrote: Yes, you are correct, except that the LEDs have to have a "threshold"[*] voltage to light at all. *If the dimmer is triggered when the AC (sine wave) is too low the LEDs don't light. *The range of adjustment will be very small. [*]as others have pointed out, this isn't an on/off thing but is highly nonlinear * I think the key is how the current source is constructed. Limiting the power lost there is important. Yes, this is a very expensive thing to do, compared to a *cheap* Triac dimmer. Note:http://joby.com/store/gorillatorch/switchback Joby makes several models of quality dimmable LED lights, but as you said they are not cheap. *The one in the link will dim thru a range of 5 - 130 lumens, mostly linear and without flicker. *I have one and it works great. *I have no idea of the circuitry they use to dim the LED and I'm not going to take it apart to find out. This response is just to let the doubters know that the technology to dim LED's is real and available. Sure dimming LEDs is possible, and actually not all that hard if you start with DC (the unit you linked is battery powered). *Doing it from the AC line, cheaply and efficiently, is more challenging. *It's easy to do sloppily, but then there is no gain over an incandescent bulb. I still do not get how you arrive at that conclusion. A string of LEDS will draw 15 - 20MA at full brightness and if you increase the size of the current limiting resistor the current will drop from there in a very linear manner. Try it. *You'll find that you are *very* wrong. *LEDs are *not* in any way linear. *You'll also find that the efficiency goes down as you lower the brightness (the resistor takes more of the line voltage). If you use a current source it works, linearly, but is no more efficient (think of the current source as a non-linear variable resistor).- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Nothing linear about a diode, he should actually try ploting a curve and see how much the resistance of a diode changes as you change the current, even much more so on a series string of the things like a lamp cluster.. Also no big deal to convert to DC to run an LED they are after all diodes they will do it for you. Thats the really cheap way out . Slightly more expesive and only arguably of better design is using a match head size bridge rectifier, cost about as much as a match too. No, they are diodes, but it's not a good idea to use them as rectifiers. *The reverse breakdown of LEDs is pretty poor. *As you note, a bridge rectifier is cheap enough. *The probelm with running them on DC is storing the energy over the cycle (filtering the DC). That isn't cheap or particularly efficient. *- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - The string itself is a rectifier. The current through them will be DC, no reason to further rectify it.. In the case of a string of xmas lights they have nearly the full line voltage across them. Works fine. Jimmie |
#36
![]()
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sat, 25 Dec 2010 19:54:58 -0600, "
wrote: On Sat, 25 Dec 2010 13:30:47 -0500, wrote: On Fri, 24 Dec 2010 17:35:37 -0600, " wrote: On Fri, 24 Dec 2010 18:24:52 -0500, wrote: On Fri, 24 Dec 2010 15:32:11 -0600, " wrote: On Fri, 24 Dec 2010 15:02:02 -0500, wrote: On Fri, 24 Dec 2010 06:25:05 -0600, G. Morgan wrote: Home Guy wrote: I'm seeing more LED lightbulbs turning up on store shelves. I don't think I've seen one yet that is ok to use with a dimmer switch. I can understand why CFL's can't be put on a dimmer - but why not LED bulbs? This is new, last 3 years. They had to develop a ballast that was adjustable. CFL's and LEDS are not a good comparison. They're crazy-priced as is. Not being able to dim them makes them even less desirable as a replacement for incandescent bulbs. L.E.D.S. Are going to difficult (impossible) to dim. Remember they are DIODES that only need .7V to illuminate. AFAIK --- LED's are not dim-able. Try 3. something volts to light a white LED. The only way to "dim" LEDs is to PWM them with variable pulse width/duty cycle. The dimming range is quite narrow. Not true at all. Using PWM, or a variable current, you can get a very substantial dimming range (with less change in color than an incandescent). It's just a PITA and a phase-control (Triac) wall dimmer ain't going to do it. The same can be done for "overdriving" an LED. Shourt duration pulses can significantly increase the visible light output without overheating the junction. No, it doesn't increase the light output at all. You may be able to see it with less output because a flashing light catches the eye, but as long as it's a "constant" light output (i.e. not visibly blinking) the light output of an LED is pretty much a linear function of the *average* current through it. Flashing of an LEDm above the eye's critical fusion frequency does not increase efficiency, rather the opposite. The efficiency of an LED goes down, at high currents, as it heats. MANY high output led applications are pulsed "overdrive" applications, and believe me, they DO put out a LOT more light. No, they don't, for any reasonable reading of that sentence. The physics doesn't allow it (the opposite, in fact). Driving them steady at those currents would blow them in a matter of minutes, but pulsed at 15-20% duty cycle at up to 4 or 5 times rated current they still deliver almost rated lifespan, and, if I remember correctly,over 5 times the rated light output. The *average* current is all that matters. The average also does the heating, so it's a no win to pulse them, other than it's the easier way to dim them. As usual you are not "completely right". I won't argue and say you are wrong in your assertions - but my UNDERSTANDING is that PEAK current controlls the visible light output, and average current affects lifespan (due to junction heating). It is not totally linear. Nope. Current controls the light output. Average current controls the average light (which the eye detects, integrated over the "critical fusion frequency"). Yes, peak current controls the peak light output, if you're detecting peaks, this might be important. It is certainly *not* if you're looking at it. Above the CFF, human eyes average the light intensity. Having high peaks with long spaces does *nothing* to aid perception and in fact reduces efficiency; LEDs are LESS efficient at high currents. Pulsing LEDs is a lose-lose proposition. My experience is obviously different than yours. As in many other cases, I need to say that just because you haven't seen it, don't make it wrong or impossible. Just means your scope is too narrow. No, you're just wrong. It's not the first time. See: http://www.gardasoft.com/uploads/APP...ing%20LEDs.pdf Did you actually *READ* that app note? An overdrive factor of *6* will produce only 3 times the light (efficiency drops by half). "The average current must be kept below the current rating for the LED." IOW, you can't overdrive it for long. The table "High Power LEDs" indicates that you can drive the LED up to 5x current for 2ms, with a 10% duty cycle. A 5X current you get 2.5X the light or ONE HALF the average light output as you would have gotten if you'd just driven it at 100%, DC. IOW, a loser. also http://www.lunaraccents.com/educational-LED-driver.html and http://www.light-speed-tech.com/ltleds.htm and http://www.optoiq.com/index/machine-...intensity.html and http://www.gardasoft.co.uk/ and http://www.smartvisionlights.com/pro...erdrive-series and http://www.freepatentsonline.com/7639219.html and http://www.parameter.se/products/Def...D3=142&ID4=155 Are just a very few references for you to look at (commercial applications of) pulsed overdrive applications for high luminence LED applications. As I've shown with the first article, pulsing LEDs is a loser. You're simply *WRONG*. I refuse to argue with an idiot |
#37
![]()
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sat, 25 Dec 2010 21:56:12 -0600, z wrote:
On Sat, 25 Dec 2010 22:26:43 -0500, wrote: On Sat, 25 Dec 2010 19:56:44 -0600, " wrote: On Sat, 25 Dec 2010 11:48:23 -0500, wrote: On Fri, 24 Dec 2010 11:58:12 -0600, " wrote: On Fri, 24 Dec 2010 12:43:40 -0500, wrote: How do you "just vary the current" efficiently, without chopping it? It doesn't have to be a lot faster but you're right, 60Hz doesn't cut it IMO. Since the currents are so low, a rheostat may not be out of the question. Huh? Sure they are. You might just as well use incandescent lights. OK you have a string of LEDs dropping about 95% of the line voltage and a resistor dropping the rest and limiting current now. How can making that resistance more by adding a rheostat in series be more inefficient? Resistors heat == inefficient But the resistor will always be there. You are just making a bigger resistor, the current will drop and the light will dim in a vary linear way. The voltage you drop across your resistor will be the same no matter how big it is. That is not like a rheostat on an incandescent where you are changing the voltage applied todrop the filament. The voltage across the resistor *does* change. Also, P=I^2R. The voltage drop across a diode is relatively constant, so the voltage across the resistor has to also be relatively constant, with only the current being changed by the change of resistance. This is not 100% accurate, but for this discussion I believe it is close enough. Not agueing with krw - just agreeing (to a point) with gfretwell. I say "to a point" because it is not totally linear. Much more linear than some would have you believe in a DC circuit. |
#38
![]()
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sun, 26 Dec 2010 00:38:39 -0500, wrote:
On Sat, 25 Dec 2010 19:54:58 -0600, " wrote: On Sat, 25 Dec 2010 13:30:47 -0500, wrote: On Fri, 24 Dec 2010 17:35:37 -0600, " wrote: On Fri, 24 Dec 2010 18:24:52 -0500, wrote: On Fri, 24 Dec 2010 15:32:11 -0600, " wrote: On Fri, 24 Dec 2010 15:02:02 -0500, wrote: On Fri, 24 Dec 2010 06:25:05 -0600, G. Morgan wrote: Home Guy wrote: I'm seeing more LED lightbulbs turning up on store shelves. I don't think I've seen one yet that is ok to use with a dimmer switch. I can understand why CFL's can't be put on a dimmer - but why not LED bulbs? This is new, last 3 years. They had to develop a ballast that was adjustable. CFL's and LEDS are not a good comparison. They're crazy-priced as is. Not being able to dim them makes them even less desirable as a replacement for incandescent bulbs. L.E.D.S. Are going to difficult (impossible) to dim. Remember they are DIODES that only need .7V to illuminate. AFAIK --- LED's are not dim-able. Try 3. something volts to light a white LED. The only way to "dim" LEDs is to PWM them with variable pulse width/duty cycle. The dimming range is quite narrow. Not true at all. Using PWM, or a variable current, you can get a very substantial dimming range (with less change in color than an incandescent). It's just a PITA and a phase-control (Triac) wall dimmer ain't going to do it. The same can be done for "overdriving" an LED. Shourt duration pulses can significantly increase the visible light output without overheating the junction. No, it doesn't increase the light output at all. You may be able to see it with less output because a flashing light catches the eye, but as long as it's a "constant" light output (i.e. not visibly blinking) the light output of an LED is pretty much a linear function of the *average* current through it. Flashing of an LEDm above the eye's critical fusion frequency does not increase efficiency, rather the opposite. The efficiency of an LED goes down, at high currents, as it heats. MANY high output led applications are pulsed "overdrive" applications, and believe me, they DO put out a LOT more light. No, they don't, for any reasonable reading of that sentence. The physics doesn't allow it (the opposite, in fact). Driving them steady at those currents would blow them in a matter of minutes, but pulsed at 15-20% duty cycle at up to 4 or 5 times rated current they still deliver almost rated lifespan, and, if I remember correctly,over 5 times the rated light output. The *average* current is all that matters. The average also does the heating, so it's a no win to pulse them, other than it's the easier way to dim them. As usual you are not "completely right". I won't argue and say you are wrong in your assertions - but my UNDERSTANDING is that PEAK current controlls the visible light output, and average current affects lifespan (due to junction heating). It is not totally linear. Nope. Current controls the light output. Average current controls the average light (which the eye detects, integrated over the "critical fusion frequency"). Yes, peak current controls the peak light output, if you're detecting peaks, this might be important. It is certainly *not* if you're looking at it. Above the CFF, human eyes average the light intensity. Having high peaks with long spaces does *nothing* to aid perception and in fact reduces efficiency; LEDs are LESS efficient at high currents. Pulsing LEDs is a lose-lose proposition. My experience is obviously different than yours. As in many other cases, I need to say that just because you haven't seen it, don't make it wrong or impossible. Just means your scope is too narrow. No, you're just wrong. It's not the first time. See: http://www.gardasoft.com/uploads/APP...ing%20LEDs.pdf Did you actually *READ* that app note? An overdrive factor of *6* will produce only 3 times the light (efficiency drops by half). "The average current must be kept below the current rating for the LED." IOW, you can't overdrive it for long. The table "High Power LEDs" indicates that you can drive the LED up to 5x current for 2ms, with a 10% duty cycle. A 5X current you get 2.5X the light or ONE HALF the average light output as you would have gotten if you'd just driven it at 100%, DC. IOW, a loser. also http://www.lunaraccents.com/educational-LED-driver.html and http://www.light-speed-tech.com/ltleds.htm and http://www.optoiq.com/index/machine-...intensity.html and http://www.gardasoft.co.uk/ and http://www.smartvisionlights.com/pro...erdrive-series and http://www.freepatentsonline.com/7639219.html and http://www.parameter.se/products/Def...D3=142&ID4=155 Are just a very few references for you to look at (commercial applications of) pulsed overdrive applications for high luminence LED applications. As I've shown with the first article, pulsing LEDs is a loser. You're simply *WRONG*. I refuse to argue with an idiot As usual, when you're shown to be wrong you run away with fingers in your ears rather than admitting it and learning something. You *are* an idiot. |
#39
![]()
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sun, 26 Dec 2010 00:45:29 -0500, wrote:
On Sat, 25 Dec 2010 21:56:12 -0600, z wrote: On Sat, 25 Dec 2010 22:26:43 -0500, wrote: On Sat, 25 Dec 2010 19:56:44 -0600, " wrote: On Sat, 25 Dec 2010 11:48:23 -0500, wrote: On Fri, 24 Dec 2010 11:58:12 -0600, " wrote: On Fri, 24 Dec 2010 12:43:40 -0500, wrote: How do you "just vary the current" efficiently, without chopping it? It doesn't have to be a lot faster but you're right, 60Hz doesn't cut it IMO. Since the currents are so low, a rheostat may not be out of the question. Huh? Sure they are. You might just as well use incandescent lights. OK you have a string of LEDs dropping about 95% of the line voltage and a resistor dropping the rest and limiting current now. How can making that resistance more by adding a rheostat in series be more inefficient? Resistors heat == inefficient But the resistor will always be there. You are just making a bigger resistor, the current will drop and the light will dim in a vary linear way. The voltage you drop across your resistor will be the same no matter how big it is. That is not like a rheostat on an incandescent where you are changing the voltage applied todrop the filament. The voltage across the resistor *does* change. Also, P=I^2R. The voltage drop across a diode is relatively constant, so the voltage across the resistor has to also be relatively constant, with only the current being changed by the change of resistance. This is not 100% accurate, but for this discussion I believe it is close enough. It is *NOT* "relatively constant" when you multiply the change times the number of LEDs in a 120V string and compare that to the voltage across the balast resistor. If you string a few together and have a large balast resistor it matters less but you're simply wasting that much more power, losing gains you made by using LEDs in the forst place. Not agueing with krw Of course not. You could *NEVER* admit that you're wrong. - just agreeing (to a point) with gfretwell. I say "to a point" because it is not totally linear. Much more linear than some would have you believe in a DC circuit. Of course you would be WRONG, as usual. |
#40
![]()
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sun, 26 Dec 2010 00:52:51 -0500, wrote:
On Sat, 25 Dec 2010 22:36:45 -0600, z wrote: Lets get to the bottom line. Are you trying to say a dimmed LED (by increasing the size of the resistor) draws more current than one at full brightness? Of course not. I'm saying that it is NOT LINEAR and NOT EFFICIENT. I guess the point is LEDs are so efficient to start with and dimming them will cut the draw even more, why make things hard on yourself to squeeze out an extra few pennies a year. I could say the same thing about replacing incandescents in the first place. Why, for a few mennies a year. In fact, that's what I do. If you are replacing an incandescent any thing you do has to be better. Not necessarily true. You still haven't come up with a good scheme to dim them. |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
LED bulbs - dimmable? | UK diy | |||
Dimmable compact fluorescent bulbs | Home Repair | |||
Comparison of Low Energy bulbs (was Compulsory low-energy light-bulbs) | UK diy | |||
Dimmable Low Energy Bulbs | UK diy | |||
Converting remote controlled, dimmable, incandescent fan lights toflourescent non-dimmable | Home Repair |