tags420
Well-Known Member
I've been running LED's for a while and now I'm trying to learn more about how exactly they work in detail. I have a good understanding of LED's as a final product but I think that doing or at least theorizing about a DIY style project will give me the best understanding of the details behind the designs.
My main question is how do you select the right drivers to handle your selected LED's?
For an example lets say I have 120 cree XT-E's that I want to run at 350mA. How would I wire them(series, parallel, combo)? And how to pick the drivers that will handle it all.
The thing that sparked this in my mind, is that I use apache techs in my garden and they use 2 meanwell plc 100 (pretty sure the 20v+ version.) and power 120 1w diodes at 350mA. I'm not sure what the forward voltage of their diodes are...but it just seems like the numbers don't match up plus I don't exactly know how to calculate the drivers needed correctly. And how would they wire the boards to not go over the voltage. Questions like those are what are bugging my brain lately.
I figure that thinking of how to use XT-E's in the apache design would get me the understanding I'm looking for without going all out and building an actual DIY panel.
My main question is how do you select the right drivers to handle your selected LED's?
For an example lets say I have 120 cree XT-E's that I want to run at 350mA. How would I wire them(series, parallel, combo)? And how to pick the drivers that will handle it all.
The thing that sparked this in my mind, is that I use apache techs in my garden and they use 2 meanwell plc 100 (pretty sure the 20v+ version.) and power 120 1w diodes at 350mA. I'm not sure what the forward voltage of their diodes are...but it just seems like the numbers don't match up plus I don't exactly know how to calculate the drivers needed correctly. And how would they wire the boards to not go over the voltage. Questions like those are what are bugging my brain lately.
I figure that thinking of how to use XT-E's in the apache design would get me the understanding I'm looking for without going all out and building an actual DIY panel.