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On Sat, 20 Mar 2004 00:25:32 GMT, Scott Gettings
wrote: Sorry this was not so "obvious". Scroll about 1/4 way down the page and click on the "more" beside the picture of the nav/strobe light demonstration. Just went through the information on the page and it looks good as well as interesting. However I'd like to offer a warning. The math and resistor rating concern me a tad. I may have misread, or mis-calculated, but... It talks about using two LEDs and dropping 7 volts at 0.35 A or ( 350 ma) and using a half watt, 20 ohm resistor. It mentions the resistor getting hot. It should, they are over rating the resistor by over a factor of 4 and that is with no safety factor. It's not uncommon for a resistor to get hot, but they should not get so hot you have to be concerned about them except in the case of wire wound power resistors which may actually run quite hot. R does = E/I and in this case 7/0.35 = 20 ohms but it needs to be carried one step farther and figure the power as well. Two ways, the first is simply the voltage times the current. You are dropping 7 volts at 0.35 A = 2.45 watts. Another way is P = I^2*R, or current squared multiplied by the resistance. or (0.35 * 0.35) = 0.1225 * 20 = 2.45 watts. Normally, we double the rating for safety so you need a 5 Watt resistor, not a half watt. You are dissipating 2.45 watts in a half watt resistor. You could get away with that if the lights were pulsed, but in this case they are on all the time. That much heat will cause the resistor value to change and is a definite fire hazard. Normally the resistor gets too hot and breaks, but I have see the things start glowing. When they do that the resistance can become quite low, rather than high and you run the risk of shorting the LEDs which would increase the current even more. Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com Scott Morgans wrote: "Scott Gettings" wrote To see an article on using LEDs and inexpensive strobes, feel free to visit our EAA site, scroll down to the member news area and click on the obvious link. http://www.eaa724.org/ Scott Gettings Glass Goose It was not so obvious to me. How about a direct link, or a clue? -- Jim in NC --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.629 / Virus Database: 403 - Release Date: 3/17/2004 |
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