nathanlee
Well-Known Member
I'm getting to the point of needing to start fitting lights in my new boat, and I want to go with LED's. However, as well all know, marine LEDs are an absolute rip off.
ebay is full of much cheaper (circa £8) light units, but they have a drawback. They need a 12v (exactly) supply, and deviations outside of this reduce their lifespan, which is the standard line you'll get from any marine LED retailer trying to flog you their £60 light.
So, I had a thought, and wondered if a electronics guru (David?) can advise. Back in the day, when I used to play with soldering irons, I often used a 5v regulator chip. Well, how about using a central smoother circuit near the boat switch panel, and regulating the supply of 12v to the cheap(er) LEDs?
http://uk.rs-online.com/web/p/linear-regulator/0453568/
£3.65 from RS components. That one will handle up to 3amps, or £14 for a more realistic 7.5amp chip. 7.5amps is a lot of LEDs.
Sound like a reasonable solution?
Cheers,
Nathan
ebay is full of much cheaper (circa £8) light units, but they have a drawback. They need a 12v (exactly) supply, and deviations outside of this reduce their lifespan, which is the standard line you'll get from any marine LED retailer trying to flog you their £60 light.
So, I had a thought, and wondered if a electronics guru (David?) can advise. Back in the day, when I used to play with soldering irons, I often used a 5v regulator chip. Well, how about using a central smoother circuit near the boat switch panel, and regulating the supply of 12v to the cheap(er) LEDs?
http://uk.rs-online.com/web/p/linear-regulator/0453568/
£3.65 from RS components. That one will handle up to 3amps, or £14 for a more realistic 7.5amp chip. 7.5amps is a lot of LEDs.
Sound like a reasonable solution?
Cheers,
Nathan