BobCajun
Well-Known Member
Reading more about the pulsed light, I can see that it's not going to work the way I thought. You have to have equal total light, meaning it would have to measure at the same intensity as the continuous light. To do that it would have to be more wattage during the pulses. But look at it this way, if you were planning on dimming your lights anyway then you might as well use the pulse lengths and duty cycles that produce best results from the light you have, rather than random ones or whatever ones are produced by a potentiometer.
Whether dimming will actually make it more efficient, as some here suggest that it does, I'm not so sure. I wouldn't think, because the LEDs are at full power during the pulses, just that they're off half the time or whatever the duty ratio is. How could that make it more efficient? Pretty sure you'd have to get a driver that puts out lower current when on full.
Whether dimming will actually make it more efficient, as some here suggest that it does, I'm not so sure. I wouldn't think, because the LEDs are at full power during the pulses, just that they're off half the time or whatever the duty ratio is. How could that make it more efficient? Pretty sure you'd have to get a driver that puts out lower current when on full.
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