I can't tell you if it was pre-set at the factory or not. The non-adjustable BuckPucks would have to come factory-set.I haven't played with the on board trim adjuster. I saw it, but figured I'd get it worked out before I played with the pot. I figured it was adjusted to the right output, i..e 100% of the rated...is that right?
OK, so is this the same BuckPuck that was putting out 1000mA when it was not connected to Bill's circuit, that is now putting out about 500mA and measuring 3v at the CNTL when the LEDs are on, and about 5v when they're OFF?Do you think my multi-meter (the cheap kind) isn't reading the current right? That may be the problem...maybe it's outputting more current than my meter is showing. Although, I did setup the LEDs (all the colors) with the 1000mA driver and the meter did measure 1A current on the LED.
OK, just don't run too much current through your LEDs, or you'll burn them up quickly. I hope you have the LEDs mounted on some kind of heatsink, or they'll get hot and burn up pretty quickly.The LEDs are rated for 1000mA (blue, green, white) or 700 mA (red). I just realized the red was 700mA...not 1A. I've been using the 1000mA driver on it, but the meter has been showing only 500mA current. Although...it did just die tonight. I can use the 700mA driver on it and then a 1000mA driver on the green LED.
OK.So, is it working right and I'm not measuring correctly, or am I still doing something wrong? When the LED is constant on...or when I turn the strobe rate way up with the 100k pot, the voltage on the control is 3V for that first buckpuck. And the meter shows 500mA, so that looks correct according to the picture in your post above. But weren't we trying to get it to be around 1.5V when the LED is on?
No, I simply mean to connect a jumper wire from ground to the junction of C1/pin 2/pin 6/R3.Alright, dumb question coming...
Shorting C1 to ground, is that the same as removing it from my breadboard and connecting a line to ground to pin 6?
No, I simply mean to remove the jumper to ground, and then connect a jumper wire from battery + to the junction of C1/pin 2/pin 6/R3.And likewise, shorting to Vcc...removing C1 and connecting pin 6 to the positive voltage line out of my battery?
That's good news!It all works! I'm getting 1A on each LED.
That IS bad news.But the bad news...I just blew out another LED.
Patient: "Doctor! Doctor! It hurts when I do THIS!" (gesturing wildly)I'm not sure what I'm doing, but somehow when I go to measure the current through the LED and then go back to plug them back in...they get killed.
I don't know why you're killing them. Yet. I don't have any of them to play with, nor any high-power LEDs.[/QUOTE]Oh well...once I get the system running I hopefully won't be killing LEDs like this. We'll see!
Not here so far. It'll probably take a few days.Did you get those extra buck pucks in the mail yet?