220 Volt Driverless COBs
I was thinking of writing a little cautionary tale called, Jimbob and Cletus die, or maybe fry.
I've been noticing
dirt cheap driverless COBs online that run on 220 AC, hook em up to a clothes dryer cord stuff. Now these probably use bridge rectifiers and perhaps capacitive droppers, are not isolated from mains voltage and it looks lethal to touch them and perhaps the heatsink they are mounted to, scary stuff. I wonder if someone would be stupid enough to try a water cooled light bar, full of these, maybe Jimbob and Cletus, what could go wrong? Maybe I'll call it, Low Cost 'n Lethal
Alas, we should write from experience, and playing with one of these things might be the end of all experience. I like my life and think I'll hang on to it for awhile. One of these could suddenly end a thread, the last post would be, "Got one of those new driverless 220 volt chips today, think I'll try it out".
I am curious though, I wonder would they be driven at 50% by 110 volts AC? Also, what would the effect of the 60 cycle flicker be on PAR? They would in effect be at low or no power 60 times a second as line voltage dropped to zero then rose, there's no capacitive reserve to mitigate this that I can see.
Kinda looks like something for those with big balls and small brains, hope they use a lot of copper grounding everything near the thing. If your working with 220 AC you'll definitely want a spec sheet written in clear ENGLISH from a reliable source. UL labs would cry at the site of this thing and the EU might put you in jail for selling it. For 220 volts AC, the line and neutral contacts look real close and I don't see an isolation gap in the PCB between them either, no ground contact on the chip that I can see...
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