• @Treczoks
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    64 days ago

    Good. It is documented. Take a TPIC6595 and you can run it from about any controller.

    • @grue
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      English
      34 days ago

      ELI5 what the TPIC6595 does for you? This guide suggests you just need 3 transistors to go with your microcontroller.

      • @Treczoks
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        24 days ago

        That is another way. Having a shift register allows you to have quite a lot of strips connected to your chip, for the “cost” of three pins in total, more or less regardless of how many different strips you want to drive.

        If you only want to drive one strip, though, a suitable transistor/MOSFET is a better choice, as you can adapt the schematics to your power requirements.

        • @glimse
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          33 days ago

          And make sure you connect the mosfet the right way so it doesn’t “kinda” work and make you think your code is bad. Not that anyone has ever done that ever.

          • @Treczoks
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            13 days ago

            With a 30A mosfet under load, you’ll soon notice, I’m sure.

            • @glimse
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              13 days ago

              Thankfully it was during my “let’s see if my code works so far” phase as I learned LESs so I only had a dozen connected. I spent a looonnnggg time trying to figure out why my button was turning the LEDs on full brightness instead of fading on. No idea if I fried it, once I figured it out I replaced it with one of the other 50 I ordered (and haven’t touched since)