
Originally Posted by
VegasF6
I have a very similar COB strip in front of me. It's DX SKU 13190. I would bet it's identical, but who can really tell. At 12V input exactly mine measures 190 mA current draw, but then, you can't take that to mean yours will be the same. Led forward voltages vary, perhaps even more so in these no name products. Not only do they vary from product to product, but the same exact strip will have variations in current draw at a set voltage based on temperature and even time (leds have a burn in period it seems.) My model doesn't give an operating current but if I had to guess I would say it is 3S by 16P circuit. 16 chips at .020 amps each suggests .320 amps. Mine has a voltage drop of 12.8 at .32 amps. May or may not be typical.
Powering this led strip from even a fixed 12V source will not be reliable, let alone from a 12V battery. I assume you mean some sort of SLA battery, gel cell or something. You can expect charged voltage to be in the range of 13.2-13.4V (its also dependent on your charger, the health of your battery and temperature.) So ideally you will use a constant current regulator. The simplest will be a linear regulator but you have to be concerned with the voltage drop of your regulator itself. You don't have a lot of overhead. FYI a resistor will actually be just as efficient as a linear regulator and allow longer run times at full current than a linear regulator would, however it won't be as reliable and you won't have a constant output.
Just to be clear, you are wanting this for area lighting not for your bike itself, correct? It wouldn't be anywhere near enough for bike lighting. For area lighting I imagine we could come up with some sort of driver solution, though it may be a challenge. But first, have you considered simply using an led lantern? I understand the joy of DIY but simply buying something like the Coleman exponent pack away for instance would be a much simpler solution. Otherwise, are you capable of building your own circuit? Perhaps a constant current circuit based on the LM2941. It will have a .5V dropout.
*edit*
I see now that the bike light was a prior project, my bad.