Has my led strip wrong frequency

Does not the current limiting drop the voltage? At some point, I’d think it would fail to conduct.

Doesn’t pwm address this in a wider range of steps?

Using your current limit system can you change the range of output from 1% to 100%?

:smiley_cat:


Luminosity is a function of current (this is a tri-color LED used for billboards).
PWM is a poor choice for visible effects since LEDs have no persistence, although the package may have some.

some LEDs are dimmable and others are not, the best are the LED ramps for aquariums which can also be found at 6500k or the color temperature of the day. It is super easy to vary their intensity and believe me it lights up
We use them with an electronic power supply and not an old-fashioned switching one, they are often 12v, so we can plug them into mks cards and others or better on a pc power supply, which remains for the price the best electrical option because it is stabilized and regulated, a simple 100watt power supply is enough, it provides 3, 5 and 12 volts, which also allows you to connect fans for smoke, a positioning laser, air assist, etc.

Thanks… I’ll have to think about it a bit… Still have a few questions…

I appreciate the information.

:smiley_cat:

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healthy!

thank you very much to all of you who helped me with the light thing. I ordered a 24v cob light strip from China, which I connect directly to the Falcon 2 light switch. No longer vibrates because of the wrong frequency, but shines brightly!!

The Lightburn 2.0 update came with new features for adjusting lights and camera settings, which is a great thing. Maybe because of bugs, or maybe I’m just stupid. those adjustments don’t (yet) work… So the lights work brightly and as they should, thanks again!!

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get some cob`s with a constant current led driver, if you want it dimmable get one that dims by amplitude dimming not pwm to avoid flicker.

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