Electronic – LED light fixture glows when not turned on

ledlight

enter image description hereThis past week at Menards I bought 2 Smart Electrician® 3650 Lumens 46" LED Linkable Shop Light Model Number: 0053-0011 | Menards® SKU: 3481400.

The LED shop light fixture has a glow to it. Looked like the LEDs were turned on, but not all the way. The power switch is turned off. Don’t know why I did this but I took one of those three prong adaptors converters to two prong and to my surprise the light fixture didn’t light up. I unplug the cord with the adaptor and turned it around and it still didn’t light up. The power supply electronics inside the light fixture must be using the earth ground wire somehow. Using my volt meter. I measured to earth ground to the green wire that comes out of the adaptor and to my surprise depending how I plug in the adaptor. I’m getting 112 volts AC. That's because the adaptor isn't keyed and I'm switching the HOT and NEUTRAL around depending how I plug it in.

I connected the LED light fixture to “Safety Analyzer tester”. When I press the “Open Ground” button, the fixture stops glowing (lightly lite LED’s). Looks like the power supply circuit inside the fixture has a connection to “Earth Ground”. I then switched the “Normal” on the polarity switch to “Reverse” and the LED’s were off. Switching the Neutral to open position has no effect. I'm thinking of taking them apart and see inside what's going on or take them back.

I figured out the problem.

In this light fixture you can clearly see the white wire (neutral/common) is connected to the light switch, turning the power off the LED light strip. Commonly we switch off the “HOT” to your light socket so when you change your bulb you have a less of a chance of getting electrocuted (that’s another story for later). Sometimes in Power supply circuits they place capacitors in there to help filter electrical noise out. Also known as suppressers (electronics to reduce unwanted noise or oscillation in a circuit or unwanted frequencies in a signal). Depending on how or where they are placed in the circuit it could possible cause some issue if not installed correctly or if the circuit isn’t designed correctly.

Since the BLACK live wire is connected to the LED PCB all the time, anything connected to that line will potentially be LIVE voltage, that way when I disconnected the earth ground from the socket and measured 112 volts on it. My guess is they have capacitors connected to both LIVE and NEUTRAL to the earth ground wire.

The current is flowing through capacitor C2, just enough to turn the LED’s on slightly. If the switch was on the hot side, this problem wouldn’t be happening. I still may use them just not connect the “earth ground” wire. Because that’s providing the return path for lighting the LED’s. enter image description here

Best Answer

It has been posted elsewhere, but there appear to be several reasons why LEDs can glow when the light is switched off. The underlying reason, of course, is that LEDs require very little power to illuminate. There is a video of someone standing under some transmissions lines and getting a LED to glow from the induced current.

  1. The switch is not completely switching off; it is a dimmer or some other device that leaks some current when it is supposed to be off.

  2. The switch is installed on the neutral wire. In this case, it isn't even necessary to have any leakage to earth. The cabling and circuitry acts as a capacitor that can have sufficient capacitance to allow a small current to flow.

  3. There isn't a neutral wire. Though most countries have a neutral wire at near ground, there are some exceptions. Some old installations in Belgium and France have two hot wires. Hence (2) applies always.

  4. If you have a dual-pole setup there are two live wires, one off at one end and one off at the other end. If the wire is long enough a current can be induced in the overlapping section of wire.

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