Hi all,
I was infected by all the luxeon star hype
in the cpf, so I decided to see if I could
buy one. It turned out to be too expensive to buy just one, so I bought 10!
I am now the proud owner of 5 white and 5 cyans.
Because I had only really wanted to build one or two luxeon flashlights, I had the luxury of a few extra units I could fry while experimenting.
I just wanted to say that I have not managed
to fry any of them and I have been really nasty to them.
I have directly driven a white luxeon
mounted on a crude home made heatsink
with 4 Alkaline D cells. Admittedly, they were slightly used batteries, but I was still getting 5.1 Volts to the Luxeon.
It got really hot - almost too hot to touch,
but I left it on for over an hour
The batteries had only depleted to 5.0 volts.
On to test number 2 ....
I have a cheap variable power supply.
I'm sure it's not current regulated.
I very slowly dialed up 12 volts on the same luxeon after it cooled down from my first test.
This wasn't maintaned for more than a second or two, because I noticed that the brightness
did not increase at all when driven over 4 volts.
The luxeons seemed to 'eat' anything above 4 volts and convert it to heat - not light.
I'm sure this has a lot to do with current not voltage, but in any case, the luxeon star
has the same brightness on 3 D cells as it
does on 4 D cells, only on 4 D cells it runs
a helovalot hotter.
I've found that optimal brightness is achieved from 3 cells. 2 Cells (3 volts) is
underdriven, and 4 Cells (6 Volts) is overdriven, but no brighter than 3 NEW cells (4.5 Volts).
The more I experiment (play) with these
luxeon stars, the more I think I could
just attach them to giant heatsinks and
run them off car batteries. They are
incredible! I can't wait for the 5 watters now!
Unless someone stops me, I'm going to mount
a white luxeon with a seriously thick
aluminum heat sink into my 4 D Cell
Scubapro diving torch. No resistors.
It's a simple mechanical mod.
I would use a resistor, but I wouldn't
know what value to use or even if it would
be beneficial. I want the luxeon to be
supplied with maximum voltage. Brightest
light from one luxeon is what I'm trying
to achieve.
Does anyone have any ideas how long this
might burn for - presuming it doesn't burn out ?
Would I be better off using a resistor to
get similar brightness and longer burn times?
Maybe a dummy battery?? I certainly don't
want to go to the trouble and expense of
fitting a step down circuit - or do I
cheers,
Ed
I was infected by all the luxeon star hype
in the cpf, so I decided to see if I could
buy one. It turned out to be too expensive to buy just one, so I bought 10!
I am now the proud owner of 5 white and 5 cyans.
Because I had only really wanted to build one or two luxeon flashlights, I had the luxury of a few extra units I could fry while experimenting.
I just wanted to say that I have not managed
to fry any of them and I have been really nasty to them.
I have directly driven a white luxeon
mounted on a crude home made heatsink
with 4 Alkaline D cells. Admittedly, they were slightly used batteries, but I was still getting 5.1 Volts to the Luxeon.
It got really hot - almost too hot to touch,
but I left it on for over an hour
The batteries had only depleted to 5.0 volts.
On to test number 2 ....
I have a cheap variable power supply.
I'm sure it's not current regulated.
I very slowly dialed up 12 volts on the same luxeon after it cooled down from my first test.
This wasn't maintaned for more than a second or two, because I noticed that the brightness
did not increase at all when driven over 4 volts.
The luxeons seemed to 'eat' anything above 4 volts and convert it to heat - not light.
I'm sure this has a lot to do with current not voltage, but in any case, the luxeon star
has the same brightness on 3 D cells as it
does on 4 D cells, only on 4 D cells it runs
a helovalot hotter.
I've found that optimal brightness is achieved from 3 cells. 2 Cells (3 volts) is
underdriven, and 4 Cells (6 Volts) is overdriven, but no brighter than 3 NEW cells (4.5 Volts).
The more I experiment (play) with these
luxeon stars, the more I think I could
just attach them to giant heatsinks and
run them off car batteries. They are
incredible! I can't wait for the 5 watters now!
Unless someone stops me, I'm going to mount
a white luxeon with a seriously thick
aluminum heat sink into my 4 D Cell
Scubapro diving torch. No resistors.
It's a simple mechanical mod.
I would use a resistor, but I wouldn't
know what value to use or even if it would
be beneficial. I want the luxeon to be
supplied with maximum voltage. Brightest
light from one luxeon is what I'm trying
to achieve.
Does anyone have any ideas how long this
might burn for - presuming it doesn't burn out ?
Would I be better off using a resistor to
get similar brightness and longer burn times?
Maybe a dummy battery?? I certainly don't
want to go to the trouble and expense of
fitting a step down circuit - or do I
cheers,
Ed