Congratulations to vtecmec for winning May/June's Lude Of The Month, with his DIY Turbo BB1 build.
>>> Click Here For Profile <<<

>>> Click Here For Profile <<<

LED lights - any problems?
- indigolemon
- The Chaos Engine
- Posts: 6680
- Joined: Wed Jun 30, 2010 1:45 pm
- My Generation: 4G
- PSN GamerTag: M149YSL
- Location: Kelty, Fife
- Has thanked: 24 times
- Been thanked: 71 times
- Contact:
But you wouldn't know with a resistor either, unless the resistor pops?
'On two occasions I have been asked, 'Pray, Mr. Babbage, if you put into the machine wrong figures, will the right answers come out?' I am not able rightly to apprehend the kind of confusion of ideas that could provoke such a question.' - Charles Babbage
- jjmartin349571
- Supporter 2016
- Posts: 3344
- Joined: Fri Feb 10, 2012 12:41 am
- My Generation: 4G
- XBOX GamerTag: jjm349571
- Location: Newhaven, East Sussex
- Contact:
An LED has a very high resistance one way, low the other, but possible not as low as a filament lamp. It's the current they draw that confuses the car's systems; if the current being drawn is too low the system assumes that the bulb is open-circuit and either flashed the indicators fast or shows a warning.
I tried a 10-ohm resistor across an LED today in the indicator circuit (the value that people sell to supposedly combat this), and it didn't work. I think it should be lower.
In fact, for a 21w lamp at 12v:
P=IV,
I=V/R
=> P=V sq / R
And R=V sq/ P
So R is 9 ohms. Two lamps on each circuit, so the car's expecting about 4.5 ohms.
But I don't know the dissipation of the LEDs, so can't work out what resistance they present.
Suffice to say it's hassle.
A.
I tried a 10-ohm resistor across an LED today in the indicator circuit (the value that people sell to supposedly combat this), and it didn't work. I think it should be lower.
In fact, for a 21w lamp at 12v:
P=IV,
I=V/R
=> P=V sq / R
And R=V sq/ P
So R is 9 ohms. Two lamps on each circuit, so the car's expecting about 4.5 ohms.
But I don't know the dissipation of the LEDs, so can't work out what resistance they present.
Suffice to say it's hassle.
A.
---------------------
'96 BB4.
'96 BB4.
Further experimentation shows that the indicator circuits need a 2.2-ohm resistor across one led bulb to be happy.
As the dissipation is then 80-watts, I've used two 4.7-ohm 50w resistors in parallel, mounted at the rear indicator wiring. the resultant 2.35-ohm is fine. The flash rate is then good.
I have the front, side repeaters and rear indicators all working fine now on LEDs.
LED bulbs don't really blow very often; as you're shunting them with resistors the bulb failure circuits won't work if they do.
I haven't experimented with the stop/tail lights yet.
But I will...
As the dissipation is then 80-watts, I've used two 4.7-ohm 50w resistors in parallel, mounted at the rear indicator wiring. the resultant 2.35-ohm is fine. The flash rate is then good.
I have the front, side repeaters and rear indicators all working fine now on LEDs.
LED bulbs don't really blow very often; as you're shunting them with resistors the bulb failure circuits won't work if they do.
I haven't experimented with the stop/tail lights yet.
But I will...
---------------------
'96 BB4.
'96 BB4.
- indigolemon
- The Chaos Engine
- Posts: 6680
- Joined: Wed Jun 30, 2010 1:45 pm
- My Generation: 4G
- PSN GamerTag: M149YSL
- Location: Kelty, Fife
- Has thanked: 24 times
- Been thanked: 71 times
- Contact:
That's the blown bulb sensor on the brake circuit.
'On two occasions I have been asked, 'Pray, Mr. Babbage, if you put into the machine wrong figures, will the right answers come out?' I am not able rightly to apprehend the kind of confusion of ideas that could provoke such a question.' - Charles Babbage
- K30DPC
- LotM Winner
- Posts: 1105
- Joined: Fri Aug 09, 2013 7:45 am
- My Generation: 4G
- Location: GB/Poland
- Has thanked: 17 times
- Been thanked: 17 times
So you say that you are waisting 80watts plus whatever LEDs need instead of 47watts (21+21+5) of standard light bulbs, also cheeting blown bulb warning light which won't work ever again just for having LED indicators?alinton wrote:As the dissipation is then 80-watts
And you wanna do the same with tail/brake?
Well...
my BB1 UKDM
Yea, that's a valid point.
Although defeating the brake light fail circuit means you don't have to use resistors...
I might try to be a clever sod and build a new flasher relay which is happy with LEDs. Shouldn't be difficult - just an astable multivibrator circuit running a pair of relays.
A
Although defeating the brake light fail circuit means you don't have to use resistors...
I might try to be a clever sod and build a new flasher relay which is happy with LEDs. Shouldn't be difficult - just an astable multivibrator circuit running a pair of relays.
A
---------------------
'96 BB4.
'96 BB4.
- indigolemon
- The Chaos Engine
- Posts: 6680
- Joined: Wed Jun 30, 2010 1:45 pm
- My Generation: 4G
- PSN GamerTag: M149YSL
- Location: Kelty, Fife
- Has thanked: 24 times
- Been thanked: 71 times
- Contact:
Have a look on ebay, you can buy LED compatible flasher relays for about six quid.alinton wrote:I might try to be a clever sod and build a new flasher relay which is happy with LEDs.
'On two occasions I have been asked, 'Pray, Mr. Babbage, if you put into the machine wrong figures, will the right answers come out?' I am not able rightly to apprehend the kind of confusion of ideas that could provoke such a question.' - Charles Babbage