12 Volts or Nothing

automotivedimmerledled strip

Hello so I am hooking up a LED strip to my car but I am having trouble with the dimmer on the dashboard. To make this very simple and easy what I am trying to achieve is to cut off the power from the LED circuit if the voltage falls under 11V. I was thinking of using a relay and have the power hooked up to the NO and positive side of the relay, therefor if the voltage falls under 11V, the relay would go to the "closed" position and the circuit would get no power, however there are no 11V relay. And I say 11V because I am getting 11.6V, not 12V.

The dimmer varies the voltage between 3-11.6V, and when the voltage falls under 11V, weird stuff happens with the IR controller box, I don't want to explain what happens cause it gets complicated.

So that's my problem/question. I am not easily able to get the a constant 12V supply, I can only tap into the 3-11.6V wire. So using that 1 wire, what simple circuit can I make?

Best Answer

I think the reason that your LED strip controller box gets messed up when you dim the lights is that most modern automotive dashboard dimmer circuits use PWM to control the brightness. This PWM will royally mess up the LED controller.

I do have a suggestion for you to try.

Most of the automotive dashboard dimmers that I've seen have high-side switches for the dash lamps. Most, but certainly not all.

Most inexpensive LED controllers have low-side switches. That is: all of the LEDs are wired up as common-anode and the FETs inside the controller pull the cathode line of each LED string to ground to turn it ON.

IF your dashboard lamp dimmer does have a high-side switch, you can try the following: cut the common (+) line that goes from the LED controller to the LED strips. Feed 12V power directly to the LED controller. Connect the (+) line that goes to your LED strips to the dashboard dimmer output.

This should allow the LED controller to work correctly and the LED strips will dim just like the dashboard lights.

Do note that you may get beating effects if the LED strips are chasing at a fast rate or are dimming. The only way to know for sure is to try it.

Related Topic