And LED CC Drivers do, but not much in the overall scheme of things...LED's don't have an "IN-RUSH" current. Motors do. Incandescent light bulbs do. Other forms of electronics do, but LED's don't.
And LED CC Drivers do, but not much in the overall scheme of things...LED's don't have an "IN-RUSH" current. Motors do. Incandescent light bulbs do. Other forms of electronics do, but LED's don't.
Ya on a system level though the LED drivers would have an in-rush from the batteryLED's don't have an "IN-RUSH" current. Motors do. Incandescent light bulbs do. Other forms of electronics do, but LED's don't.
Not really, if they're powered by DC, there should be no inrush, the inrush is to charge the capacitors in an AC to DC.Ya on a system level though the LED drivers would have an in-rush from the battery
I don’t know what “the calculator“ you are referring to, but the TS referred to this one. Not only is it mislabeled “LED Inrush” omitting the word driver and giving LEDs a new property they never had before, but the very silly formula used simply multiplies the rated maximum current of the driver by 100.For LEDs rated at 3.3V @ 100 mA and using a 12V supply, the calculator is not rubbish, only misunderstood.
I used the https://calculator.academy/led-voltage-calculator/ and posted an accurate screen copy of the result.I don’t know what “the calculator“ you are referring to, but the TS referred to this one. Not only is it mislabeled “LED Inrush” omitting the word driver and giving LEDs a new property they never had before, but the very silly formula used simply multiplies the rated maximum current of the driver by 100.
So, the calculator under discussion is, in fact, rubbish.
It‘s really worse than you make it. The formula (shown at the bottom of the page) is:
\[ I_C = SSC\ \times\ 100\ \times\ D \]
Where SSC is Steady State Current and D is the number of drivers. In other words, it uses a blind coefficient of 100 for any driver. So, if I have an LED driver that can provide 10A, my calculated inrush is 1000A!
I found the explanation of the LED "inrush" almost amusing, if it had not been such a piece of garbage presented as correct. No explanation of how an LED heats up as it starts operating. BUT it is exactly the sort of thing I expect to see on the cartoon channel.Ya on a system level though the LED drivers would have an in-rush from the battery
Yes. Look up the inrush current for Meanwell AC to CC LED drivers. Can anybody else recall seeing the term elsewhere??

What? The variables it accepts are:I used the https://calculator.academy/led-voltage-calculator/ and posted an accurate screen copy of the result.
The Inrush calculator, I presume uses the load capacitance of each diode so that when using thousands of them in an LED Matrix all turned on at once you might get a 100x surge from the ESR of the diode capacitance relative to the incremental Rs of the diode. It is not important or this calculator should NoT BE used for single LEDs or small arrays, which was not stated. It is valid to have many current sources , one for each string in a 2D matrix. So if I have interpreted the meaning correctly, it isn't rubbish. Only the assumptions are not clear.
OK, certainly a driver circuit, with a rectifier and filter. I mean for an actual LED.Yes. Look up the inrush current for Meanwell AC to CC LED drivers
https://www.meanwell.com/newsInfo.aspx?c=1&i=794 then use a soft start current limiter.
Inrush current for power supplies is not “LED Inrush Current”, the inrush of an LED driver, as in any power supply, is caused by the filtering components (capacitive and inductive). It has nothing to do with the LEDs and what the supply is powering isn’t the issue.Yes. Look up the inrush current for Meanwell AC to CC LED drivers
https://www.meanwell.com/newsInfo.aspx?c=1&i=794 then use a soft start current limiter.
Just as the “LED Inrush Calculator“ makes no reference to LEDs, the Meanwell inrush current concerns are about the power supply not the load.When the AC power system powers on a capacitive or inductive load, such as switching power supply, there is a temporary inrush current peak, which may cause AC circuit breakers to trip even though the continuous current draw is well below the breaker ratings.
Hi,I found the explanation of the LED "inrush" almost amusing, if it had not been such a piece of garbage presented as correct. No explanation of how an LED heats up as it starts operating. BUT it is exactly the sort of thing I expect to see on the cartoon channel.
And I am not familiar with the "Load Capacitance" of an LED. I am not sure about it, I may have missed reading it on an LED spec sheet. It is an interesting concept. I am trying to imagine "a matrix with thousands of LEDs" but nothing appears. Can anybody else recall seeing the term elsewhere??
I mean relative to an actual LED of any size or power level.