Wife bought a couple night lights that have PIR detectors in them. There are two settings; setting 1 turns the light on at dusk via an LDR. In mode 1 the lights are low. When the unit detects motion it changes to a brighter setting. In standby it puts out about 15 lumens and when motion is detected it puts out 40 lumens for 90 seconds after the last MDE (motion detect event). In setting 2 the night light is off until it detects motion after dusk.
What I want: I want to reduce the 40 lumens by at least half and I also want the 90 second after last MDE to be shortened to about 10 seconds. Reason is this unit is going to be in the hallway. Nobody hangs out in the hallway and at night when someone gets up for a drink of water or to use the facility the other person still sleeping in bed has to wait the full 90 seconds before the light goes off - AND it's bright enough to disturb my sleep. So in the picture [edit] Drawing removed - see post #8 for more complete information. [end edit] you see the board with all components possibly identified. U2 has some traces underneath the chip and I can't determine where they go without desoldering it. And I'm not currently equipped to desolder a chip like that without damaging it. To the right of the board is the light board illustrated in traditional schematic diagram form. I could use a little help picking out the time delay (90 sec.) and reducing the current (looks like R10 just needs to be bigger. (and U1 must have a trace underneath that goes to the pin indicated with the dotted line (sort of)).
[edit] Drawing removed - see post #8 for more complete information. [end edit]
The LED boards:

What I want: I want to reduce the 40 lumens by at least half and I also want the 90 second after last MDE to be shortened to about 10 seconds. Reason is this unit is going to be in the hallway. Nobody hangs out in the hallway and at night when someone gets up for a drink of water or to use the facility the other person still sleeping in bed has to wait the full 90 seconds before the light goes off - AND it's bright enough to disturb my sleep. So in the picture [edit] Drawing removed - see post #8 for more complete information. [end edit] you see the board with all components possibly identified. U2 has some traces underneath the chip and I can't determine where they go without desoldering it. And I'm not currently equipped to desolder a chip like that without damaging it. To the right of the board is the light board illustrated in traditional schematic diagram form. I could use a little help picking out the time delay (90 sec.) and reducing the current (looks like R10 just needs to be bigger. (and U1 must have a trace underneath that goes to the pin indicated with the dotted line (sort of)).
[edit] Drawing removed - see post #8 for more complete information. [end edit]
The LED boards:

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