How to plan the LED circuit, voltage, and resistor

ac-dccurrentledvoltage

The LED emitters in my outdoor lamps blew out and I need to replace them but I have to rebuild the emitter from scratch because replacement parts are not available. The whole lamp was made in China. They are fed by AC.

I have the following:
– 1 Luxeon K High Power LED Array. Forward voltage requirement of 20V with 730 lumens at 350mA. Perfect sized emitter and I have a good heat sink to mount it to. The Part number is LUXEON-K-COBWW08, an 8 emitter array.

  • 1 AC to DC power converter. It is a MagTech AC Dimmable – 18-Watt, 700mA Constant Current LED Driver. I don't need it to be dimmable at the switch, but I don't mind adding a dimmer to the inner workings of the lamp. The Part number is M18-U24-0700

  • I can buy any resistor needed. That's not the issue.

Curiously, the DC output from the AC converters I measured to be 30V. Both of them. They are rated to be dimmable between 14-24 VDC. This is at a constant 700mA.

When I bought the drivers, I planned a 24V power to a 20V requirement and got planned for a resistor of 12 ohms. (24-20)/.35mA = 11.4 ohms. The lights are rated at 350mA. Any more current and they'll burn up.

Since the output is 30V, should I swap the 12 ohm resistor for a 30-35 ohm resistor? (30-20)/.35=28.5ohms

Is there a simple way of hardwiring a variable drop in voltage? I can set the output with my multimeter and leave it in the housing of the light.

I'm worried that, within this outdoor light, wiring a 35 ohm resistor will require me to radiate off too much heat. I'll need a 20 watt resistor.

This is getting out of my league and I think ledsupply.com sold me incorrect equipment.

Thanks.

Best Answer

Let us calculate the resistance of the LED at the operating voltage:

R = V/I

V= 21 v (typical), I = 350 mA, so R = 60 Ohm.

The LED driver operates at maximum 24 volt with 700 mA, so it works with maximum 34 Ohm load. Any load with higher resistance will give an unpredictable current result that may damage the load. So you can not simply connect 35 ohm resistor with the 60 Ohm LED in series.

To divide the current, you can connect the load in parallel (not in series) with 60 Ohm resistor. If it is difficult to find exactly 60 Ohm resistor, you can use 56 Ohm/10 Watt resistor that is available in digikey. It gives 338 mA and 20.276 Volt in the LED.

enter image description here