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I have installed a sting of LEDs in the bay of my BackShop.   They worked perfectly until the last few days when they started to slightly flicker from time to time. It's very subtle, not constant.   I swapped out the DC wall wart.  That did not fix the problem.  Is there something other than replacing the LEDs I can try?  Thanks.

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Here's the power supply.   Yes, it's connected directly to my LEDs and the fluorescents in the Backshop.  Do  I connect it by splicing  it on the leads from the power  supply?  I was thinking of doing it by connecting across the terminal strip that I use to make the connections to the lights.  Would that work?  By the way, what is that bulge in the power supply lead?  It looks like a boa  swallowing a pig!

Thanks for your help...

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I think the most common configuration is the 5cm or 2" section.  So you're probably using 8 sections.  With a typical current of 20 mA per section, that would be 160 mA total.

I ask because of the minimum load requirement on switching power supplies - your adapter is undoubtedly of that type.  I'm not saying yours has this requirement but a common rule-of-thumb is 10% of rated capability.  Since your nameplate says 2000 mA, 10% would be 200 mA so you'd be near the minimum possibly explaining the intermittent behavior - and components do age over time and temperature and can change characteristics.  It's not like the power supply will blow up or do anything spectacular if you don't load it but it might exhibit instability (flicker?) on its output.  In general, adding capacitance to a power supply improves stability.  This is just speculation but might connect the dots so to speak.

ToledoEd posted:

Stan, so if I understand, you are advising I should not add any further lights to my power supply?

No, I think he said that you needed a few more lights to draw enough current to stabilize the transformer output.   Add more lights and you shouldn't need the capacitor and have no flicker.

it's an educated guess on his part. Like the Polar Express story, B-E-L-I-E-V-E.

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