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wiring up LED's for in-house use

J

Jason

Jan 1, 1970
0
I'm looking for some direction here. I've come up with an idea for a
home project. But don't know where..or exactly WHAT I need to get to
make it happen.

In our house we have two sets of stairs that are very dark. Even with
the hallway lights on above them, it's still so dark that you can't
see walking down them. I want to use LED's to light them. But routing
a groove under the overhang on the stairs (these are hardwood stairs
mind you) and putting an LED in each groove, I think it would light
them up well enough and look pretty slick at teh same time.

The problem is I'm not sure where or what I need to get to make it
happen. The LED's and such are simple. But the power supply is what's
giving me problems. Basically I want something safe and as low power
as possible, only what's needed. I can't seem to find anything that
looks to be more than a hobby/science project level device. I want
something that I can just wrap my wires around and safely plug into an
outlet somewhere.

Can anyone lend some suggestions here? I would greatly appreciate it.
 
J

Jonathan Kirwan

Jan 1, 1970
0
I'm looking for some direction here. I've come up with an idea for a
home project. But don't know where..or exactly WHAT I need to get to
make it happen.

In our house we have two sets of stairs that are very dark. Even with
the hallway lights on above them, it's still so dark that you can't
see walking down them. I want to use LED's to light them. But routing
a groove under the overhang on the stairs (these are hardwood stairs
mind you) and putting an LED in each groove, I think it would light
them up well enough and look pretty slick at teh same time.

The problem is I'm not sure where or what I need to get to make it
happen. The LED's and such are simple. But the power supply is what's
giving me problems. Basically I want something safe and as low power
as possible, only what's needed. I can't seem to find anything that
looks to be more than a hobby/science project level device. I want
something that I can just wrap my wires around and safely plug into an
outlet somewhere.

Can anyone lend some suggestions here? I would greatly appreciate it.

Just a thought, but would a simple, tiny box with a push button and a bright,
white LED at the top and bottom of the stairs (set on the wall like a light
switch) be enough? I'm thinking of a timed circuit that would turn on the LED
only for a short time and use one AA or AAA battery. Some of those LEDs are
pretty bright and could be aimed appropriately from the wall. If the timing was
set to, say 1 minute, then it may meet your needs without routing, wiring, etc.
Less time and money.

Unless you really just have to have the under-stair look, here.

Jon
 
P

peterken

Jan 1, 1970
0
Jonathan Kirwan said:
Just a thought, but would a simple, tiny box with a push button and a bright,
white LED at the top and bottom of the stairs (set on the wall like a light
switch) be enough? I'm thinking of a timed circuit that would turn on the LED
only for a short time and use one AA or AAA battery. Some of those LEDs are
pretty bright and could be aimed appropriately from the wall. If the timing was
set to, say 1 minute, then it may meet your needs without routing, wiring, etc.
Less time and money.

Unless you really just have to have the under-stair look, here.

Jon

Ever thought of putting the leds in series and using an ordinary transformer
like say 220-24V at say 100mA ?
Or even a simple wall-warth accomodating the needed voltage ?

P
 
J

Jonathan Kirwan

Jan 1, 1970
0
Ever thought of putting the leds in series and using an ordinary transformer
like say 220-24V at say 100mA ?
Or even a simple wall-warth accomodating the needed voltage ?

Asking the OP? Or me?

Jon
 
B

Byron A Jeff

Jan 1, 1970
0
-
--> On 19 Nov 2004 17:43:33 -0800, [email protected] (Jason) wrote:
->
-> >[SNIP]
-> >In our house we have two sets of stairs that are very dark. Even with
-> >the hallway lights on above them, it's still so dark that you can't
-> >see walking down them. I want to use LED's to light them.
-
-Ever thought of putting the leds in series and using an ordinary transformer
-like say 220-24V at say 100mA ?

Why use an ordinary transformer when a wall wart will do just fine. Find a
9-12V DC @ 500ma and go to town.

I'd suggest using a resistor per LED and wire in parallel. So if one LED goes
out for any reason, the others still function.

-Or even a simple wall-warth accomodating the needed voltage ?

That's the right idea. Now the problem is reduced to how to get the
power to the stairs.

BAJ
 
R

Robert Monsen

Jan 1, 1970
0
Jason said:
I'm looking for some direction here. I've come up with an idea for a
home project. But don't know where..or exactly WHAT I need to get to
make it happen.

In our house we have two sets of stairs that are very dark. Even with
the hallway lights on above them, it's still so dark that you can't
see walking down them. I want to use LED's to light them. But routing
a groove under the overhang on the stairs (these are hardwood stairs
mind you) and putting an LED in each groove, I think it would light
them up well enough and look pretty slick at teh same time.

The problem is I'm not sure where or what I need to get to make it
happen. The LED's and such are simple. But the power supply is what's
giving me problems. Basically I want something safe and as low power
as possible, only what's needed. I can't seem to find anything that
looks to be more than a hobby/science project level device. I want
something that I can just wrap my wires around and safely plug into an
outlet somewhere.

Can anyone lend some suggestions here? I would greatly appreciate it.

Buy a 'wall wart' from radio shack or wallmart that supplies 5VDC at 500mA.

Run a pair of wires down the stairway. Connect one of the wires to the
positive output, and the other to the negative output of the wall wart.
Wall warts generally use those little 'coax' plugs. You can buy coax
sockets at radio shack, or just cut the wires coming out of the wall
wart, and connect them to the wires running down the stairs.

Do not connect the wires to each other anywhere, and make sure they
won't touch each other (that would be a 'short circuit').

At each step, connect the positive wire to a single 100 ohm resistor,
then to the long lead of to a white LED. From the other lead of the LED,
run a wire back to the negative wire.

Test the circuit, and make sure the wire isn't getting warm near the
wall wart. If you use lamp wire, you shouldn't be able to feel it warm
up. Speaker wire might be OK too. Generally, wire about the same size as
the wire coming out of the wall-wart will be OK.

You can buy all the parts online at

<http://www.goldmine-elec.com/default.htm>

or just buy the parts at radio shack.

--
Regards,
Robert Monsen

"Your Highness, I have no need of this hypothesis."
- Pierre Laplace (1749-1827), to Napoleon,
on why his works on celestial mechanics make no mention of God.
 
J

Jonathan Kirwan

Jan 1, 1970
0
<snip>
-Or even a simple wall-warth accomodating the needed voltage ?

That's the right idea. Now the problem is reduced to how to get the
power to the stairs.

All these will work, of course. But if it were me outfitting a stairs to make
them safer to walk up or down, I'd probably rather avoid stringing wire,
attaching it so that it is relatively permanent and safe as well as reasonably
attractive, protecting the wiring from scuffs and cats and kids and so on,
routing the edges of stairs, and having to find a nearby outlet. Etc.

Which is why I was curious if a different arrangement would solve the problem,
satisfactorily.

Jon
 
R

Rich Grise

Jan 1, 1970
0
All these will work, of course. But if it were me outfitting a stairs to make
them safer to walk up or down, I'd probably rather avoid stringing wire,
attaching it so that it is relatively permanent and safe as well as reasonably
attractive, protecting the wiring from scuffs and cats and kids and so on,
routing the edges of stairs, and having to find a nearby outlet. Etc.

Which is why I was curious if a different arrangement would solve the problem,
satisfactorily.

Sure! Just work from the basement! ;-)

My first thought was, if the OP isn't "stuck" on LEDs, what about those
light strings like they use in movie theaters? A string of xmas lights
could work in that app. Lead dress is always just an aesthetics problem. :)

You could even use some of those outdoor low-voltage things, and junkyard
car reverse/back-up light things, but now we're talking construction
project. ;-)

Good Luck!
Rich
 
R

Ray

Jan 1, 1970
0
I just got 50 11000mcd white LED's from E-bay for $12, the run on 3.5V
30mA. As Robert said, wire LED's in parallel with a 100ohm resister to each
diode. They will only pull about 15mA each if you power with a cheap 5v
wall adapter or an old computer power supply. If you used all 50 diodes you
would only be pulling about 750mA.
Something else to think about is alternate ways of turning it on... get a
couple IR sensor and IR diode at the top and bottom of the stairs and when
someone breaks the beam, a timer circuit (555) will turn the diodes on for
a minute or so.
 
D

Don Klipstein

Jan 1, 1970
0
I just got 50 11000mcd white LED's from E-bay for $12, the run on 3.5V
30mA. As Robert said, wire LED's in parallel with a 100ohm resister to each
diode.

That sounds wrong to me - I say series!
They will only pull about 15mA each if you power with a cheap 5v
wall adapter or an old computer power supply. If you used all 50 diodes you
would only be pulling about 750mA.

Not far from true! And the total light output would be anywhere from "7
watt nightlight" to something higher but probably less than that of a 15 watt
lightbulb! And please note that 120 VAC 15 watt lightbulbs have half or a
little less than half the efficiency of 100 watt ones!

- Don Klipstein ([email protected])
 
L

Lord Garth

Jan 1, 1970
0
Zack said:
Why do you need to use the resisters?

It limits the current to a safe level. Without this, the LED would burn up.
The limiting in those little key chain lights is the internal resistance of
the button cells.
 
B

Bill Bowden

Jan 1, 1970
0
That sounds wrong to me - I say series!

Well, you can't put 50 in series, but you might use
2 strings of 25 which only requires 2 resistors and
a 200 volt bridge rectifier.

25 in series at 3.5 each is 88 volts. The peak line
is 170 so you have 82 peak across the resistor. RMS of
82 is 58 so the resistor will be 2900 ohms for
20 mA RMS current. A 2 watt size should handle it.

-Bill
 
R

Ray

Jan 1, 1970
0
Have you gave a thought to having them on the ceiling pointing down? Then
you could put them in some type of track u shaped, have the wires tucked
inside and just nail or staple the track to the ceiling. No trip wires or
chew toys for animals. It'll be like party lights going up the steps.
Have your power coming off the light fixture so the existing switch will
turn on everything. Wire up some white christmas tree lights to see if you
like the idea before making a bunch of series/parallel cables.
 
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