MrNaz
Enlightened
How tolerant are LEDs of inaccurate voltage? I know the LED won't light at all if you go much below its Vf, but how about above? Say a Cree R2 with a Vf of 3.7V will that tolerate, say 4.8V if I limited it to 350mA ?
How tolerant are LEDs of inaccurate voltage? I know the LED won't light at all if you go much below its Vf, but how about above? Say a Cree R2 with a Vf of 3.7V will that tolerate, say 4.8V if I limited it to 350mA ?
How tolerant are LEDs of inaccurate voltage? I know the LED won't light at all if you go much below its Vf, but how about above? Say a Cree R2 with a Vf of 3.7V will that tolerate, say 4.8V if I limited it to 350mA ?
Hmmm , I think he may have been wondering about a direct hook up .
IE / 4.7v [ ?? ] from a 3D torch directly fed into the LED [ 3.7v ] , and he may have been wondering [ I know I am ] if the LED will survive this voltage [ Im wondering in anyway , esp as I have several flashlights id like to mod ]
lovecpf
Depending on the voltage droop of the D cells and that individual led die's Vf, you might merely drive the led at stupid-high levels. I'd put money on burning it out though. Connecting a led directly to batteries with no resistor or other means of current regulation is just dumb.
do you guys know what would happen if we tried to drive a p7 by 2 nimh batts (roughly 2.4volts). i read where elektrolumens was gonna try that and the thing was just suppose to run for a long long time, and half as bright. i was thinking of wiring a 2d p7, but according to those charts it wont even fire up.