I’ve got the appropriate amount of light for my microscope ring light, but now I need to put it all in an enclosure of some sort.

If I don’t have a custom board to solder these to, what are my best options for connecting these she mounting them into something?

If this is too vague, please let me know if I can clarify

    • @sneekee_snek_17OP
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      45 months ago

      I had that same thought, but I’m running 4, 3.3V diodes per parallel branch/arm/whatever, with a 12V power supply, so the calculations I’ve seen for determining the appropriate resistor tell me this doesn’t need any.

      It felt wrong, but I wanted to see if it would light up, and it did! I tried to wrap this concern into the “is it going to start on fire?” Bit lol

      • @marcos
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        45 months ago

        Not only you always need at least a resistor, but matching the power supply voltage to the leds drop will ensure you’ll have a hard time maintaining their brightness on the real world.

        If you want to keep it simple, leave 1V or 2V as a margin and add a resistor to get the desired current. If you want to make it fancy, get a led driver.

        • @sneekee_snek_17OP
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          15 months ago

          When you say “the real world” what do you mean, exactly? Because the 12V, 200mA power supply I used to power it for these pictures is likely what will ultimately power it

          • @[email protected]
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            fedilink
            25 months ago

            You have a current limiting power supply. So the power supply transistor is acting as the resistor for you in this scenario.

          • @marcos
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            5 months ago

            For example, as the leds on the original circuit age, you can expect a few of those lines to stop getting any current, and the others to get brighter and brighter until they fail.

            That can happen very quickly too, if their temperature varies a lot (how much is a lot depends on the leds). Or if you change your power supply for one capable of more current, it’s likely that everything will just fail immediately. Or, if you have a noisy one, you may severely reduce the leds lifetime.

            As a rule, you can’t use diodes internal resistance as a power limiter. It does not behave the same way as resistors and will surprise you on every bad way possible.

            • @sneekee_snek_17OP
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              15 months ago

              Huh, if I had the time I’d do some reading about it. Sounds like there’s some really interesting physics going on there

        • @sneekee_snek_17OP
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          15 months ago

          That being said, I redid it with your input in mind. It’s currently got 100U resistors and draws a good bit more than the power supply is capable of

      • @Blue_Morpho
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        25 months ago

        They are available in a number of different sizes.

      • @[email protected]
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        fedilink
        15 months ago

        Like the other commenter said they are available in various sizes, but they are also really easy to cut into shape, even odd shapes using a Dremel, router, or scroll saw.

        • @Blue_Morpho
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          25 months ago

          Green perf board usually has fiberglass inside so I’d be careful about dremeling it. Brown perf board has cardboard inside.

  • wuphysics87
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    fedilink
    15 months ago

    Idk much about circuitry, but you might be able to 3d print the enclosure. If you are lucky, someone has open sourced plans close to what you need

  • @[email protected]
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    15 months ago

    It all depends on how fancy and compact you want it. Technically you could cut holes in cardboard, poke them through, then hot glue them in from the back.

    I’d probably 3d print the ring with holes for the LEDs then hot glue the back side. Perf board is good to put a bunch of components close to each other to connect them. Since the LEDs need to be in a ring pattern, it seems like you’d end up cutting the perf board into small pieces just to attach it to a ring of some kind.