Its warm white. Assume worst case 100ma each when designing. If they draw leas then good. I didnt check with amp meter how much they draw you knkw.Did you check the current when applying 3V. I don’t think those are current limited themselves and need a circuit that sets the current. I suspect you will find that the draw less than 100mA at 3V.
The specs you gave do not list a yellow option.
The trouble is, he is not using a limiting resistor. And warm white LEDs are likely 3.3V or so. So applying 3V directly probably works but gives some random lower current.An AMP meter is no good for measuring LED current when the supply voltage is near the LED forward voltage,
because the meter "steals" some of the circuit voltage resulting in less circuit current.
Usually we measure the accurate voltage across the current-limiting resistor then calculate the current.
The emitter voltage Ve will be approximately Vb-Vbe, which ideally is V1-.7. Since your emitter is grounded, and you have no base resistor, you can look at it like the emitter here is a short circuit to ground.In the LTSPICE, I am using BJT transistor NPN as a switch. I put in the below snapshot vbe to be 0.8V but my voltage from R1 load side where the dash is to the ground is NOT 0V. I get 1.442V. When I put V1 to be 1.0V voltage from R1 load side where the dash is to the ground is NOT 0V. I then get 102.5119mV. If the transistor turns on at VBE of 0.7V, the voltage from the R1 load side where the dashed line is to the ground should see 0V, but it doesn't. What am I doing wrong? Why?
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