stardustsailor
Well-Known Member
It seems that the 3IN1 dimming function is becoming rather a market's standard ,as it is incorporated by many other L.E.D. power supply manufacturers ,aside from MeanWell.
Every individual way of three ,has it's own pros and cons ,regarding the overall design and dimming function of the drivers .
In short :
Dimming by Resistor.
Design can be build with using only an appropriate potentiometer ,
or a more complicated approach of using a single pole rotary switch with multiple positions and the dedicated resistors (connected in series) .
Easy to build ,not much fuss .
Thing is that cheap potentiometers have rather large tolerances from the indicated resistance and
also dimming by a potentiometer is not the most 'linear ' dimming fuction ever .
A great addition would be any mean of measuring the driving current (Io ) ,thus a digital or analog amperemeter is rather a great addition ,but also more circuitry involved.
The rotary switch option,as it has 'preset' Io outputs ,won't benefit from a amperemeter really.
Dimming By +10VDC external voltage .
It needs an external +10 VDC PSu ..What more to say ?
Dimming can be tricky and/or unstable ,depending on the external voltage source.
Needs Common Grounding of led driver's dimming circuit and the external voltage power source.
Dimming by Pulse Width Modulation (PWM ).
Needs a pwm signal of +10VDC ( usually of 100-3000 Hz frequency ).
" Dawn-noon-dusk " ," season " ," weather " and other things regarding the "light output-spectrum vs time " aspect of LED light automation can be simulated or performed,by the use of a digital controller (from aquarium led lights) or by a microcontroller like Arduino Uno .
More here => *Part I
Personally in my most recent lights ( V series ) ,the rotary position approach was favoured ,
because of it's simplicity in designing and building ,the low cost of the parts used & their operational durability and the fact that the preset Io outputs ,really serve fine the final purpose of dimming function.
That ,until recently ,when a special order came up from a customer ,that while he liked much the idea of the rotary switch manual power adjust ,he also wished for the automated control option .
He asked for a small audio "jack" input ,at the rear side of the case,where he can plug an Arduino and do his things ....
I had to come up with a new human interface design .....
At first glance ,I saw two possible issues...
1) A switch should be installed to disable the manual rotary switch option and enable the PWM input ..
And vice-versa ..
2)A 10 VDC power supply had to be found ..Arduino outputs +5VDC signals ..
3IN1 dimming function of led drivers needs 10 VDC ...
I liked not the possibility of those issues becoming a reality..
Neither I like a switch at the rear of the case ..
Neither I like to use a 7810 IC to make +10VDC out of the fan power supply (+12 VDC ) ..
I had to come with something else ...
1) Why not use the last (#12 ) position of the rotary switch as the "Manual/Auto " setting and at the same time to be the max output ,when at "manual control " ?
2) Why not ,to use the drivers own +10 VDC output from DIm+,for the PWM signals from Arduino ?
Well ..Yes ..Why not ?
And here it is ..
How it works ,on the next post ....
Every individual way of three ,has it's own pros and cons ,regarding the overall design and dimming function of the drivers .
In short :
Dimming by Resistor.
Design can be build with using only an appropriate potentiometer ,
or a more complicated approach of using a single pole rotary switch with multiple positions and the dedicated resistors (connected in series) .
Easy to build ,not much fuss .
Thing is that cheap potentiometers have rather large tolerances from the indicated resistance and
also dimming by a potentiometer is not the most 'linear ' dimming fuction ever .
A great addition would be any mean of measuring the driving current (Io ) ,thus a digital or analog amperemeter is rather a great addition ,but also more circuitry involved.
The rotary switch option,as it has 'preset' Io outputs ,won't benefit from a amperemeter really.
Dimming By +10VDC external voltage .
It needs an external +10 VDC PSu ..What more to say ?
Dimming can be tricky and/or unstable ,depending on the external voltage source.
Needs Common Grounding of led driver's dimming circuit and the external voltage power source.
Dimming by Pulse Width Modulation (PWM ).
Needs a pwm signal of +10VDC ( usually of 100-3000 Hz frequency ).
" Dawn-noon-dusk " ," season " ," weather " and other things regarding the "light output-spectrum vs time " aspect of LED light automation can be simulated or performed,by the use of a digital controller (from aquarium led lights) or by a microcontroller like Arduino Uno .
More here => *Part I
Personally in my most recent lights ( V series ) ,the rotary position approach was favoured ,
because of it's simplicity in designing and building ,the low cost of the parts used & their operational durability and the fact that the preset Io outputs ,really serve fine the final purpose of dimming function.
That ,until recently ,when a special order came up from a customer ,that while he liked much the idea of the rotary switch manual power adjust ,he also wished for the automated control option .
He asked for a small audio "jack" input ,at the rear side of the case,where he can plug an Arduino and do his things ....
I had to come up with a new human interface design .....
At first glance ,I saw two possible issues...
1) A switch should be installed to disable the manual rotary switch option and enable the PWM input ..
And vice-versa ..
2)A 10 VDC power supply had to be found ..Arduino outputs +5VDC signals ..
3IN1 dimming function of led drivers needs 10 VDC ...
I liked not the possibility of those issues becoming a reality..
Neither I like a switch at the rear of the case ..
Neither I like to use a 7810 IC to make +10VDC out of the fan power supply (+12 VDC ) ..
I had to come with something else ...
1) Why not use the last (#12 ) position of the rotary switch as the "Manual/Auto " setting and at the same time to be the max output ,when at "manual control " ?
2) Why not ,to use the drivers own +10 VDC output from DIm+,for the PWM signals from Arduino ?
Well ..Yes ..Why not ?
And here it is ..
How it works ,on the next post ....
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