A
alan_fx8150
Hello everyone,
I'm new to these forums and opened the account to ask for help (please, please, please) with my planned circuit...
Power Source:
Basically, I want to power an LED circuit from my PC's PSU Molar (12v red wire). The internet shows the red wire to be 12+ and the yellow 5+ - does this mean that its safe to assume its 12v, or could I end up overpowering and destroying everything?
Circuit Specs:
Voltage input: 12v, LED through power: 3.1v, MA 30v x24 LEDs
Aim of the Plan:
I will have 4 fan shrouds at the rear of the case and 2 in the middle (above the motherboard). Each has 4x5mm LED holes so I'm trying to plan a circuit of 16 (rear) & 8 (middle) LEDs for 24 in total.
Research:
I've used LED online calculators but they only seems to show 3 LED's in series per resistor and this would be very difficult to plan due to distances. The calc's say to use a parallel connection of 8 wires - leading to 3 LED's in Series followed by a 100ohm 1/4w Resistor on the ground wire?? Shouldn't the resistor be on the positive wire or is the ground wire okay?
Solution?
Can I plan out a parallel connection of 6, leading to 4 LEDs in series, then which resistor should I use? Would another option be to have maybe 3 wires in series, leading to 3 resistors, then splitting to 6 LEDs (to keep things simpler?). I cant see how 12v can be enough to power 24x 3.1v LEDs regardless of being series or parallel. Can it actually even work at all? I know the calc's say it can but I'd rather a 'real' person say yay, nay or maybe please
I know there's are a few queries here so if anything doesn't make sense, I'd be happy to clarify. Please could you take a look as my research has taken me this far, but my experience is zero and I'm struggling to find a similiar situation in forums!
I'm new to these forums and opened the account to ask for help (please, please, please) with my planned circuit...
Power Source:
Basically, I want to power an LED circuit from my PC's PSU Molar (12v red wire). The internet shows the red wire to be 12+ and the yellow 5+ - does this mean that its safe to assume its 12v, or could I end up overpowering and destroying everything?
Circuit Specs:
Voltage input: 12v, LED through power: 3.1v, MA 30v x24 LEDs
Aim of the Plan:
I will have 4 fan shrouds at the rear of the case and 2 in the middle (above the motherboard). Each has 4x5mm LED holes so I'm trying to plan a circuit of 16 (rear) & 8 (middle) LEDs for 24 in total.
Research:
I've used LED online calculators but they only seems to show 3 LED's in series per resistor and this would be very difficult to plan due to distances. The calc's say to use a parallel connection of 8 wires - leading to 3 LED's in Series followed by a 100ohm 1/4w Resistor on the ground wire?? Shouldn't the resistor be on the positive wire or is the ground wire okay?
Solution?
Can I plan out a parallel connection of 6, leading to 4 LEDs in series, then which resistor should I use? Would another option be to have maybe 3 wires in series, leading to 3 resistors, then splitting to 6 LEDs (to keep things simpler?). I cant see how 12v can be enough to power 24x 3.1v LEDs regardless of being series or parallel. Can it actually even work at all? I know the calc's say it can but I'd rather a 'real' person say yay, nay or maybe please
I know there's are a few queries here so if anything doesn't make sense, I'd be happy to clarify. Please could you take a look as my research has taken me this far, but my experience is zero and I'm struggling to find a similiar situation in forums!
As an Amazon Associate Electricians Forums may earn a small commission from qualifying purchases.