-
Hi @tjko , Could you tell me how did you come up with the 49.9K ohm value for the resistors accompanying the LEDs for the 12v voltage ? Thanks! |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
Replies: 1 comment 5 replies
-
LEDs used are "high-intensity" ones, around rated current (10mA if I recall correctly) they were way too bright.... I picked the resistors so that the LEDs didn't look "too bright" by just eyeballing while adjusting resistance using a resistance decade box... Then I picked resistor values based on something reasonably close that I happened to have... Brightnesses look pretty close by just looking at the LEDs, but if doing math (and trying to match that ~ 240uA for the 12V LEDs), then probably 20k for 5V and 13.7k for 3.3V would produce more uniform brightness.... |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
LEDs used are "high-intensity" ones, around rated current (10mA if I recall correctly) they were way too bright....
I picked the resistors so that the LEDs didn't look "too bright" by just eyeballing while adjusting resistance using a resistance decade box... Then I picked resistor values based on something reasonably close that I happened to have...
Brightnesses look pretty close by just looking at the LEDs, but if doing math (and trying to match that ~ 240uA for the 12V LEDs), then probably 20k for 5V and 13.7k for 3.3V would produce more uniform brightness....