LED Dimming help


Recommended Posts

Probably should look for a real forum about LEDs, but maybe someone on here could help

I am building a Light Fixture, that I hope to have a production run on in the future.

I am using a 5 meter LED strip, cut into separate strips. I want to dim these, however the only info I can find to do this is to use a PWM inline dimmer. This one goes between the power supply and the leds. This is not what I want though. I want to build the dimmer into the lamp, and the PWM switches are too big. I have room for a dial potentiometer though. Does anyone know if those can be used to dim LED strips? How do I find out what potentiometer to look for as far as range goes.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi,

You can use a potentiometer to control brightness of LED's. As for the range, I would just experiment. Pots are not expensive, just get a few and see what works best.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I am using led strips already. Its a 5 meter segment cut into 8 strips. Total power consumption will be around 24 watts 2 amps. I am having a hard time finding a pot that is 12v and can handle that kind of wattage. Any suggestions on where to look for one? I have considered a controller, would that be a better route

Secondly as a fall back, I have looked at just using a regular push button switch or even a rotary switch that would turn on various strips and different clicks. I can't seem to find a 12 volt switch that would handle 24 watts, most are just .5 to 1 watt. Would it be possible to use a 125 volt switch on a 12 volt system

Link to comment
Share on other sites

You don't need a 12V pot, you just need any pot thats got a voltage > 12V. Then depending on what brightness reduction you want you select the resitance of it, e.g. a 10 Ohm pot. won't dim it very much but a 1M Ohm will probably have the LEDs completely off without turning the pot much.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

for pots and switches in general, do I need to be looking at the max watts or miliamps rating? I mean being that I will be using about 24 watts of power

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 4 weeks later...
  • 1 month later...

Generally speaking, the higher the SMD number, the brighter the light. Also the higher the amp draw.

3528 strip are overly bright for interior lighting......which means 5050 strip would be blinding.

Exterior lighting should be at least 5050s, if not 5630s.

If you plan on using a dimmer, keep this in mind: You need a switching dimmer, not your standard voltage dimmer. LEDs are on/off, with no in-between. That means lowering the voltage ain't gonna do squat. You need to reduce the amount of time the LEDs are lit -- basically, you need to adjust how rapidly they are switched on and off. A switching dimmer will decrease the amount of on/off cycles, increasing the amount of off time between on cycles -- but so fast that human eyes don't detect any flicker, only dimmer light.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.