Rasser
Active Member
Lets say you would use 3 pc psu's for your 30V light's witch has a max draw of 3.7 amps,Hey Rasser. That looks like some serious power. I did see that PWM comment on your thread, but it looked a bit advanced for me...I'm not to worried about dimming my LEDs at the moment. I always need more watts, not less. So I didn't look into it too closely..
How do PC power supplies limit the power they put out? I've been told that LEDs need to have current controlled drivers, and I'm not very good at electronics...the reasons for avoiding voltage controlled power seem pretty solid though. Do you know about that and whether all PC power supplies would work? You sound like someone who knows about electronics!!
if you connect them directly to 36V then the LED array will draw much more current than
the max 3.7A and properly burn off, so regulation is needed.
Traditionally you did that in big resistors or transistors(a electronic resistor) limiting the current
but waisting a lot of energy in heat. With the fast switching transistors and mosfets using PWM the loss in small.
PC power supply's don't limit current, but voltage and thats not good for LED's -a little fluctuations in voltage can results in the LED draws to much current,
and if one led in a string short circuit the rest will consume the power and maybe burn off.
So some current limitations is needed. and that is the function of the PWM switching mosfet
with some feedback circuit measuring the draw current.
In reality one could just fit a amp meter and adjust while looking at that, to stay within
the operational range between, no light in one end, and burned off in the other.
It would be nice the get so close as possible to the actual voltage of the leds
and that is the case with the modules in my Apollo 6 light, running with the build in inverters
I measured 35,7Volts if I remember correct.
In you case with 30.4 volt needs
I would say 4 PC PSU 12V+12V+3.3V+3.3V = 30.6 - it could properly run directly without anything else that way.
Or 3 PSU's running 12V+12V+5V = 29V -a bit dimmer than normal but would not need any imitating current.