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Originally Posted by oldpa:

... as I run conventional,  so I'm going to use some of the DC/DC adjustable  regulators after the rectifier.

Is this being powered by variable track voltage?  If so, have you confirmed there is enough voltage at lower track voltages (below, say, 10V) to light up the strip? 

 

There can be quirky situations such as lower-cost chopped-sine controllers working "better" wrt lighting up a strip than expensive pure-sine controllers.

It is variable track voltage and I have not checked to see how well they will work; however I did put a strip in one of the cars powered by a 9 volt battery and at 9 volts it’s right at the brightness I like.

 

I’m also thinking, if needed, I could short-out the built in resistor on the strips to have more of a voltage range.

 

Greg

Sounds like you're on top of the situation.

 

If shorting the resistor is not enough, you can instead short one LED from each section of 3.  At ~9VDC on a section you're driving each section at just a few milliamps...rather than the nominal 20 milliamps if driven at 12V.  At such a low current, the resistor does not eat very much voltage - less than 0.5V - whilst each LED drops about 2.9V.  So in this option, you'd drive 8 LEDs (2 per section instead of 3).  I believe you'll find this still has suitable uniformity/smoothness in lighting up a car.  And you'll gain about 2V of bottom end voltage range.

Remember, shorting out the resistor doesn't actually increase the voltage range, rather it lowers it in a very tight band.  With no current limiting, you can very quickly overcurrent the LED's with just a volt or two excess voltage and kill them.

 

It's really very important to have current limiting for LED's if you don't have precise voltage control.

 

Stan's idea is a good one to drop the voltage range, you still keep some current limiting capability but lower the minimum voltage requirement.  You'll probably not notice one LED from each group being missing as far as the lighting is concerned.

 

I tried the mod using one three-LED segment from a strip.  It requires 7 VAC from the transformer with the resistor and one LED position shorted in each three-LED group.  That gets you most of the way there with some intensity adjustment of the lighting.  At around 7.5 VAC, the regulator circuit is fully operational and very little change is noticed in the light output all the way to maximum voltage at 18 volts.  At around 6 volts the lighting is on pretty decent, but not at the set brightness yet.

 

 

 

 

ogr led bypass

Here's a version of a 12V strip where you can see the interconnections within a 3-LED section.  I realize most strips now have opaque coatings so you can't see what's going on but if you have a meter you can also confirm the interconnection scheme and of course once to figure it out for one section, that scheme is repeated on all other sections.

 

Sometimes it can be easier/faster to bypass an LED by adding a jumper wire rather than removing the LED and then shorting across the pads with a tiny wire.  In the photo the middle LED is to be taken out of the circuit.  Of course you don't get the unused LED to recycle into another project but you may save some a minute or two and since an LED is "worth" less than a nickel, the minimum wage police won't come knocking...

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