| Electronics > Beginners |
| I'm confused...(musings on LEDs and capacitors) |
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| rrinker:
With 6F, that LED is going to glow for a long time. One thing the smaller physical size supercapacitors has enabled is a "keep alive" circuit for model trains. I only have one locomotive with a keep alive in it, but with (I believe, I haven't taken it apart to see what value the caps are) a total of .1F available, this loco will keep rolling for nearly a minute if I take it off the rails and set it on my bench - like a windup toy. Motor turning, driving the thing, and the LED headlight is on. |
| RJSV:
Wow, what a great thread, and all responses are helpful, there. I have always called the VI curve for an LED type as 'spongy', which is exactly wrong. How about this explanation: You can press on a glass window all you want, but its the movement that indicates breakage is emminant. Uh, maybe lame, but seriously many of (us) have a difficult time on the LED drive theory. One way to view it is only see the voltage as a 'reaction', and calculate using a 'nominal' voltage (crudely viewed as not changing). That means calculate the current using your applied voltage, minus the 'characteristic voltage'. You can measure that, likely it will be 1.8 volts, for a red LED. So use 9 volts (measure the battery) minus the 1.8 volts, thats what is driving your series connected resistor and LED. Adding a second LED just right directly in parallel with the first LED will cause the 'Characteristic voltage to only look a bit lower, like 1.7 volts (keeping in mind the LED pair should be very similiar or from the same manufacture batch, etc.). Now, I would argue: "You said no voltage, and now you are saying apply 9 volts, etc.". Well remember, placing that series resister creates a more linear look, from the source capacitor viewpoint, the LED is buried somewhat, or isolated from a pure applied 'voltage'. Now I'm confused! (kidding) RJ |
| GadgetBoy:
If anyone is curious, the 6F cap lasted a week and a half. Sent from my ONEPLUS A3000 using Tapatalk |
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