Mr. Oddly Fox
- Jul 10, 2015
- 19
- Joined
- Jul 10, 2015
- Messages
- 19
Sounds complicated and exotic, I know. Just stick with me here.
I am building an LED chandelier and I want it to blink.
I will use a switch to turn off the light, and a switch to enable/disable the blinking function.
I have also attached a quick sketch as to how I want the switches to perform.
The chandelier will incorporate 10x 0.5W, 120mA LEDs with forward voltages of 3.6V.
The power supply is 5V/2.5A.
I only want to bring the power down enough to not burn the LED out.
I need them as bright as possible without destroying the component.
I usually use this to calculate the right amount of resistance, but since most of the blinking circuits use multiple resistors, I am at a loss.
http://www.hebeiltd.com.cn/?p=zz.led.resistor.calculator
There are two basic blinking circuit configurations that I know of; attached.
I want to keep the LEDs as bright as possible, but make them blink.
I was thinking about making a board with 5x paired LED blinking circuits; but I am open to the idea of every light having it's own blinking circuit using the single LED configuration.
My biggest issue is the resistance. Since these circuits incorporate different components and multiple resistors, I am having an trouble comprehending what to do.
And if I could get some advice on transistors, I have had some issues reading their specs. (maybe my source was bad)
- How are their limits measured?
- How much voltage is too much?
- Do they have current limits?
And if you have any ideas as to how to make 10 LEDs blink randomly, I am open to suggestions.
Like if one LED could blink every 0.5 seconds, another could blink 0.7 seconds, and another 0.9 seconds, and so forth.
I want the offsets to make the blinking appear random and not so predictable to somebody watching it.
I want to say in advance, thank you. I really do appreciate the help I receive on this forum.


I am building an LED chandelier and I want it to blink.
I will use a switch to turn off the light, and a switch to enable/disable the blinking function.
I have also attached a quick sketch as to how I want the switches to perform.
The chandelier will incorporate 10x 0.5W, 120mA LEDs with forward voltages of 3.6V.
The power supply is 5V/2.5A.
I only want to bring the power down enough to not burn the LED out.
I need them as bright as possible without destroying the component.
I usually use this to calculate the right amount of resistance, but since most of the blinking circuits use multiple resistors, I am at a loss.
http://www.hebeiltd.com.cn/?p=zz.led.resistor.calculator
There are two basic blinking circuit configurations that I know of; attached.
I want to keep the LEDs as bright as possible, but make them blink.
I was thinking about making a board with 5x paired LED blinking circuits; but I am open to the idea of every light having it's own blinking circuit using the single LED configuration.
My biggest issue is the resistance. Since these circuits incorporate different components and multiple resistors, I am having an trouble comprehending what to do.
And if I could get some advice on transistors, I have had some issues reading their specs. (maybe my source was bad)
- How are their limits measured?
- How much voltage is too much?
- Do they have current limits?
And if you have any ideas as to how to make 10 LEDs blink randomly, I am open to suggestions.
Like if one LED could blink every 0.5 seconds, another could blink 0.7 seconds, and another 0.9 seconds, and so forth.
I want the offsets to make the blinking appear random and not so predictable to somebody watching it.
I want to say in advance, thank you. I really do appreciate the help I receive on this forum.



Last edited: