Rocket Soul
Well-Known Member
Again, this is for 660 pr boost, not uv. The uv will need more.Not arguing, but I'll add this. The driver is limited to 6.7 amps, but that strip needs over 38v to draw 1400mA, so it's quite safe.
Again, this is for 660 pr boost, not uv. The uv will need more.Not arguing, but I'll add this. The driver is limited to 6.7 amps, but that strip needs over 38v to draw 1400mA, so it's quite safe.
It is behaving like it is wired in series. If you look back at his wiring drawing, positive is going to the first strip, and negative is going to the last. With all those negative jumpers, it seems like it should work, but maybe not. I would try moving that negative lead to the first strip next to the positive, and see if it makes a differenceok am slightly lost.
but what i observe.
I thought he wired it with POS (+) down 1 side and NEG(-) down the other on each strip...he just used home-made jumpers instead of using wago's?It is behaving like it is wired in series. If you look back at his wiring drawing, positive is going to the first strip, and negative is going to the last. With all those negative jumpers, it seems like it should work, but maybe not. I would try moving that negative lead to the first strip next to the positive, and see if it makes a difference
I got confused myself...so many drawings I lost track of what was actually used...lolparallel wiring led strips without wago's?
I thought series give bigger shock risk because working with higher DC voltage!? Your driver has an output of 36V, you can't hook them up in series..www.rollitup.org
I didnt see that one. I was refering to this pic. Thought is may explain the low amp draw, and higher voltage
Hey man, are you referring to the pictures the OP took of his inline meters?parallel wiring led strips without wago's?
I thought series give bigger shock risk because working with higher DC voltage!? Your driver has an output of 36V, you can't hook them up in series..www.rollitup.org
I didnt see that one. I was refering to this pic. Thought is may explain the low amp draw, and higher voltage
Not sure anymore.. Just seemed that he was maxing out at half the output he should have been. Just grasping at straws. Two parallel strings in a series would do the same thing... Or its just the driverHey man, which picture?
No. This one shows the pic i am talking about. He created a weird path with the positive to the first strip and the negative to the last, with jumpers from the negative back down to the first strip.. Just seemed like it could create some issues with resistance etcHey man, are you referring to the pictures the OP took of his inline meters?
not sure if that would be good move.It is behaving like it is wired in series. If you look back at his wiring drawing, positive is going to the first strip, and negative is going to the last. With all those negative jumpers, it seems like it should work, but maybe not. I would try moving that negative lead to the first strip next to the positive, and see if it makes a difference
I was going off a different drawing he had thrown up that didnt look kosher. The way he has it is correctnot sure if that would be good move.
if he would go with all the power over the first strip the needed voltage would be even higher.
The 240H-42AB could also be tried on the 3000k. I would try momentarily connecting a fresh D-cell battery in series with the driver to see if a little more voltage is needed. No need to solder or anything like that, just touch the wires to the battery.just to clear things up i connect it like this:
10 X 4000k strips to the 240H 36B driver
20 X 3000k strips to the 480H 36B driver
btw 240H 42AB is on its way and will probably arrive next week!
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