coreywebster
Well-Known Member
I just rechecked it because its been puzzling me. I also checked my clone light which is series parallel wired and I plugged it in to my kilowatt meter to check.I’m still confused by that led gardener link tbh.
The drivers max current will be overrated if I put 54 strips on it.
Unless the current is only split on parallel strings. So
On the 3 series strings the 3 parallel strings get a total of 12v and 16.7a but that means we have just tripled the total amps... but I guess that is theoretically possibly as the amps must go up when bolts go down? I think. We’re still at a total of 16.7a we have just made the wiring so that the 16.7a gets used twice? That doesn’t sound right...
If that’s true each parallel string of 18 strips would split 16.7a for 0.92a 12v per strip.
Each strip using around 11w x 54 594 total watts
I misunderstood the way LED gardener worded it. The total current (16.7amp)gets divided by the number of parallel connections and the voltage of the combined strings in series is multiplied by that , so it would be 16.7 / number of parallel connections multiplied by 36v for the 3 strips.
Which is what we were originally thinking until I got it in my head you then had to divide the current again.
So basically the Q strip is max 1amp, don't go less than 17 x 3 parallel - series. Each series acts as constant current, each strip will receive the same.
Sorry again for confusing the issue, I wanted to be sure of what I was saying and turned out I confused myself and then you both in the process