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| Electronic Projects Design/Ideas/Reviews Are you building an electronic project or want to? Maybe you need some assistance? Come and submit your electronic questions here and let our experienced members find a solution. |
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Many laser diodes have a photo-diode inside that is used with an external transistor to adjust the brightness. I don't know if these laser diodes have the feedback transistor and I don't know how much extra voltage the transistor needs.
The transistor also might limit the current. The datasheet for the laser diode assembly will tell all.
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Uncle $crooge |
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The "manufacturer" AixiZ Service & International, LLC is just a distributor for 184 companies that make laser diodes and many other optical items.
The search on the website did not know of the part number for the laser diode.
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Uncle $crooge |
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Torben... thanks for all the info, it is clarifying much for me...
audioguru... yeah I was thinking that would be the case. I'm pretty sure that they're actually made somewhere in China. I couldn't find that info on their web site.... Last edited by Willie TwoFinger; 11th May 2008 at 02:36 PM. |
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When you buy parts from E-Bay then you don't get a datasheet and you don't get the spec's that are needed to use the parts properly.
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Uncle $crooge |
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Another question has come up...
"We need to find out the formula for the amps when we wire it series/parallel. Is it just straight up division? If I had lets say 200 diodes wired into four groups of 50 -and each of those four was wired series, and I used a 12 volt adapter- then would the total amps be 1/4th what it would be?" |
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Also, how big of a resister can be placed on each diode if I so desired? I know that is a lot but... I'd do it... is it even feasible?
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Quote:
OK, for this I'm going to assume we're just using bare LEDs here (not laser modules with integrated electronics). Assumptions: all LEDs are 3.2V LEDs which want 50mA; we have a 12V power supply. So Vled = 3.2V; Iled = 50mA, and Vsupply = 12V. The short answer to your questions is "No, the total current drawn would not be 1/4 of of just wiring them all up in parallel. It would be 0." That is, 200 3.2V LEDs wired in 4 strings of 50 LEDs each would not even try to light up from a 12V power supply. Remember that you need (Vled * number of LEDs per string) volts to run the thing. (3.2 * 50) = 160V. You are not going to get a 160V device to run on a 12V power supply without some kind of boost converter. If you used a 160V+ power supply then the current draw would be 200mA (50mA * 4). With a 12-volt supply your longest string of LEDs can be 3 LEDs long. Why? Because 3.2V goes into 12 at most 3 times. So you could do 66 groups of 3 LEDs (with 2 LEDs left over), or 100 groups of 2 LEDs. Make sense? Torben |
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Torben...
Yeah, it's starting to sink in... Much thanks! |
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Everybody is just guessing without detailed spec's.
The laser assemblies might need external current-limiting or not. What is their minimum and maximum allowed voltage and current?
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Uncle $crooge |
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