Audioguru again
- Joined Oct 21, 2019
- 6,826
You said the red LEDs have a forward Voltage 1.9V to 2.3V. You did not measure them.
You said the three D batteries produce 4.5V. You did not measure the loaded voltage.
Then your math correctly shows 1.9V x 2= 3.8V. (4.5V - 3.8V)/1 ohm= 0.7A.
If the battery voltage drops to 4.2V which happens soon at 0.7A then the current will be a little less than (4.2V - 3.8V)/1 ohm= 0.4A, almost half.
But if the LEDs are 2.3V and need 4.6V plus more voltage for the resistor then the current and brightness will be low.
If the LEDs are 2.3V and the battery has dropped to 4.2V then the LEDs will produce no light.
You show five sets of "700mA" which is a total current of 3.5A. How much does the battery voltage drop at such a high current and does the battery holder contacts drop even more voltage?
You said the three D batteries produce 4.5V. You did not measure the loaded voltage.
Then your math correctly shows 1.9V x 2= 3.8V. (4.5V - 3.8V)/1 ohm= 0.7A.
If the battery voltage drops to 4.2V which happens soon at 0.7A then the current will be a little less than (4.2V - 3.8V)/1 ohm= 0.4A, almost half.
But if the LEDs are 2.3V and need 4.6V plus more voltage for the resistor then the current and brightness will be low.
If the LEDs are 2.3V and the battery has dropped to 4.2V then the LEDs will produce no light.
You show five sets of "700mA" which is a total current of 3.5A. How much does the battery voltage drop at such a high current and does the battery holder contacts drop even more voltage?
