Electrical – Driving lights with an audio amplifier

amplifieraudiopower supply

I'm working on a project where I want to have Christmas lights (or LED strips if needed) react to music. In this case, the end goal is to have them pulse to the beats/bass of the music. There's a lot of LED strips that come in kits where there's a microphone that listens to the music but this doesn't work for me for a few reasons:

  1. seems cheesy
  2. doesn't give me just the bass
  3. I'd prefer a hard-wired solution

There's a lot of solutions on YouTube where people hack in to their speakers and simply power the lights from the signal being sent to the subwoofer in the speaker. This works, but I can only drive a small number of lights this way and this is also highly dependent on the volume of the music.

Another approach is to build a SSR (solid state relay) based circuit like this but the problem here is that I'm not looking to do any high voltage wiring myself (just an EE student here) due to the fact im not comfortable with it and I don't know anyone who really is.

I thought of the idea to purchase an audio amplifier (or I guess I could make one with a transistor and potentiometers) that would normally drive a set of speakers and instead have it drive my lights. I know it would put out a lot of power I wouldnt need, but I can adjust this using the gain controllers on the amp (power efficiency isn't the goal here- overkill is acceptable.) Would this even work? Fundamentally I think this would work, but am I missing something? -perhaps resistive load issues

Best Answer

Google "music activated lights" but you'll find old schematics.

If you want only the bass, you'll need to run the signal through a lowpass filter followed by a peak detector(ie, a diode). Signal can come from a microphone or the amp's output, or RCA connector...

Then you'd use the output of that to turn the LEDs on or off with a MOSFET, for example.

If the original power supply has a voltage output, you can even reuse it.

DO NOT use a MOSFET to switch the AC mains! The switch goes on the low voltage side...