claudio
Well-Known Member
In order to protect my LED strip lights from over voltage I decided to buy some LED Constanst voltage drivers. The spec says
auto step down step up(SEPIC)
input 3-35V
output 1.25V-30V
biggest current 2A
conversion efficiency 92%
frequency 50KHz
Output ripple 40mV
temperature -40℃ to +85℃
size 48*23*14 (mm)
Now when I connect my LED strip direct to 13V supply, I measure the current draw at 800mA.
I then connect the driver in circuit and adjust the output voltage to 13V.
The current draw is now 1.29A from the input side (13V input still)
So by my calculations 490mA is being used to generate heat in the converter, this equates to 6.37W.
0.8x13 = 10.4W is being used by the LED strip
This is no where near the quoted efficiency of 92%
6.37/10.4 = 61.25% efficiency.
Agreed a little better than an incandescent but .....
Looking deeper into the chip specs it appears that the max efficiency quoted is around 90% at 32V input voltage.
Anybody have similar experiences ?
auto step down step up(SEPIC)
input 3-35V
output 1.25V-30V
biggest current 2A
conversion efficiency 92%
frequency 50KHz
Output ripple 40mV
temperature -40℃ to +85℃
size 48*23*14 (mm)
Now when I connect my LED strip direct to 13V supply, I measure the current draw at 800mA.
I then connect the driver in circuit and adjust the output voltage to 13V.
The current draw is now 1.29A from the input side (13V input still)
So by my calculations 490mA is being used to generate heat in the converter, this equates to 6.37W.
0.8x13 = 10.4W is being used by the LED strip
This is no where near the quoted efficiency of 92%
6.37/10.4 = 61.25% efficiency.
Agreed a little better than an incandescent but .....
Looking deeper into the chip specs it appears that the max efficiency quoted is around 90% at 32V input voltage.
Anybody have similar experiences ?


