As it seems the blue LED is the only way to go for a power indicator, I have a dumb question. I read where others have wrapped a couple of turns around the toriodal power transformer to energize the light.
I just ordered a couple of Lumex "Ultra Super Blue" panel mount LED's for my upcoming projects. My question is how the diode lives with the AC coming off the transformer.
I trust others, but most I have seen work off the DC heaters on tube gear. Can you feed them AC without smoking these 5.00 each jewels?
TIA,
George
I just ordered a couple of Lumex "Ultra Super Blue" panel mount LED's for my upcoming projects. My question is how the diode lives with the AC coming off the transformer.
I trust others, but most I have seen work off the DC heaters on tube gear. Can you feed them AC without smoking these 5.00 each jewels?
TIA,
George
I have never done this. It's a lot easier to simply
place the LED in series with a resistor between the
+ and - supplies. Makes a nice supply bleed-down
circuit, also.
place the LED in series with a resistor between the
+ and - supplies. Makes a nice supply bleed-down
circuit, also.
In my latest Gainclone project it was more convenient for me to wrap 10 extra turns on a toroid for a blue led. I connected it through regular rectifying diode and intensity adjustment resistor. Works fine.
Blue diode wiring
Thanks for the advice on parts needed. I will wrap wire and measure voltage untill it gets to the proper range.
If there are replacements needed I will look into the Agilent LED's. The blue models are not available locally. But that is what is great about the net!
George
Thanks for the advice on parts needed. I will wrap wire and measure voltage untill it gets to the proper range.
If there are replacements needed I will look into the Agilent LED's. The blue models are not available locally. But that is what is great about the net!
George
I use some turns of bell wire around the toroid to get ~ 8V, a diode after, a cap and the led. The value of the cap controls the intensity of the led.
I assume this is a shunt cap
Some have metioned a series resistor, you are using a shunt cap for filtering?
Some have metioned a series resistor, you are using a shunt cap for filtering?
I put the cap after a rectifier diode, from the +V to ground. Then it is the blue led. I did it to get some ripple off the line voltage to the blue led. Now that I think of it maybe it is a silly idea, but it works. The bigger the cap the higher the voltage the blue led sees, that is why the cap is controlling the light intensity.
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