fearnoevil
Well-Known Member
Hey all, I'm still pretty much a noob when it comes to DIY LED fixtures, so bear with me if I'm asking an obvious question ;?D
So I've read that a fixture with say 5 COBs run in series, can experience catastrophic failure in the event that one of the COBs burns out, causing a cascading power overload. Wondering what to do to protect against this, at first I considered some sort of fuse on each individual COB, but I'm also worried that this might introduce other issues (believe me when I say electronics is not my strong suit, lol).
But I have this idea that there might exist some off the shelf switch to which each of the 5 COBs would be wired, separate from the power supply but with an interrupt circuit on the AC side of the driver, and would monitor current flow.Then if any of the 5 failed, it would immediately cut power to the entire unit thus saving everything else.
Yeah, I have no idea if such a thing even exists, lol, and I suppose that if there was some of the big brains on here would have posted it by now, but maybe I just didn't enter the correct search parameters. But so far I haven't been able to find much if any info on this subject, just that it can happen, but if there is such a thread I would really appreciate that link. Thanks in advance for any input and suggestions ;?)
So I've read that a fixture with say 5 COBs run in series, can experience catastrophic failure in the event that one of the COBs burns out, causing a cascading power overload. Wondering what to do to protect against this, at first I considered some sort of fuse on each individual COB, but I'm also worried that this might introduce other issues (believe me when I say electronics is not my strong suit, lol).
But I have this idea that there might exist some off the shelf switch to which each of the 5 COBs would be wired, separate from the power supply but with an interrupt circuit on the AC side of the driver, and would monitor current flow.Then if any of the 5 failed, it would immediately cut power to the entire unit thus saving everything else.
Yeah, I have no idea if such a thing even exists, lol, and I suppose that if there was some of the big brains on here would have posted it by now, but maybe I just didn't enter the correct search parameters. But so far I haven't been able to find much if any info on this subject, just that it can happen, but if there is such a thread I would really appreciate that link. Thanks in advance for any input and suggestions ;?)