in parallel they all blow, no survivors.but parallel they all may be gonners.
1 or 2 LEDs per strip may have made it.in parallel they all blow, no survivors.
That could be the case if the LED's on the strips are wired in series.1 or 2 LEDs per strip may have made it.
Most strips are built with 8 parallel then series of those 8...so in this case more then likely its the first set of paralleled LEDs on the strip that got fried and the rest are usually fine.That could be the case if the LED's on the strips are wired in series.
A fuse is made to be "the weak link" in a circuit...so if the remaining parts try to use/pull more current then the fuse is rated for it blows.Well, I cut my losses on it and set the other one up.... That wouldn't turn on either.
I didn't have a fuse for the plug when I first hooked these up so stuck a 3 amp one in...
I changed the fuse to a 13a one and it came on. Hooked the first build up which I thought I'd blown and it came on
Lucky
Just out of curiosity, what amp fuse should I be using in these plugs and why?
And more to the point, why, when I ran the direct current straight to the strips, was it the fuse which blew first?
Cheers