LED strings - 12v or 5v - Which should you Buy and Why.

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  • čas přidán 29. 06. 2024
  • Here's a comparison of 12v and 5v LED strings, to help you decide which is right for your project.
    If you’ve shopped for LED strings you’ve seen they come in 2 flavors, 12v or 5v. Not sure which you should get? Let’s compare them and decide which is best.
    First point of comparison is price. When I did my first Holiday LED project I bought the 5v version, mostly because they were significantly cheaper if you buy 10 strings at a time. $10 vs $14 per string, for otherwise identical lights. If you don’t get the 10-pack then the prices are about the same.
    Link for 12v or 5v LED strings - a.co/brD3d4I
    Another important consideration is the power supply. Prices are very similar. 20 amp power supplies for both voltages are about the same price.
    12v 20 amp PS: a.co/grHoBt9
    5v 20 amp PS: a.co/8wNDIC0
    One thing to consider about the power supply is that the controller you’re using is probably going to require 5v power. So if you plan on powering your controller from the same power supply as your lights then 5v gets a point here. However, I have a recommended solution. Find yourself an abandoned computer, you probably have one around the house or maybe find one at the thrift store. Computer power supplies have both 12v and 5v power, and usually plenty of amps to power a lot of lights.
    Next question is; are 12v lights brighter than 5v lights? Nope. Actually, the LEDs in these strings “use” or “require” the same amount of voltage. Depending on the color between 2.1v and 3.8v. So at each LED there’s a resistor that drops the voltage from 12v or 5v to something in the range that the LED can really uses.
    So then what is the point of different voltages? The only thing left to compare is voltage drop. Voltage drop occurs when electricity travels long distances in a wire. A good wire has low resistance, but not NO resistance, and the longer the wire the more resistance it creates. Thinner wires also add more resistance than thicker wires.
    Here’s a comparison of 12v lights and 5v lights and how they are affected by distance, and voltage drop.
    So which one is right for you? Well, as usual, it depends. If your project doesn’t require lengths of more than 15-20 ft (or 5-6 meters) then you could save some money using 5v lights.
    If you plan to run your lights farther than that, you could use 12v lights, but adding extra 5v boosters every 15 ft isn’t very expensive. So you could still save money with the 5v lights. But if the hassle of running the extra wires seems worth the money, then go for the 12v lights.
    Hope that helps.
    The End
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Komentáře • 285

  • @AndyDoesJapan
    @AndyDoesJapan Před 5 lety +18

    Holy crap, this was so helpful! I went from "I have no idea" to "I know exactly what I'm getting" before the video was even over. Thanks alot!

    • @DrZzs
      @DrZzs  Před 5 lety +2

      Awesome!
      Glad it helped!

  • @GS-qe3pt
    @GS-qe3pt Před 3 lety +2

    Most complete video on youtube about this subject. Thank you very much!

  • @ilducedimas
    @ilducedimas Před 3 lety

    Your video answers so many of questions I've had for a long time. Thanks a lot !

  • @davidferreira4518
    @davidferreira4518 Před 2 lety

    Damn.. It's rare for me to comment on something, but this video was just perfect. Simple and concise with really good visual examples. Take my like sir and thank you!

  • @2Ustfu
    @2Ustfu Před 6 lety +3

    Thanks Justin for another very informative video. I am thinking of running crown lights around the perimeter of my living room ceiling. The perimeter runs about 20 meters total, and I was about to buy some 5V power sources with 4 boosters. But having a single 12v power and stringing 20 meters of LEDs would make a neater presentation. I am glad I saw this video before I began this project. Saved me a lot of time.

    • @DrZzs
      @DrZzs  Před 6 lety

      Excellent!
      Mission accomplished!

  • @TokyoAkiHara
    @TokyoAkiHara Před 6 lety +8

    Thanks for the video!! This was so clear and simple to understand!
    I'm looking into buying a lot of LED strips to literally ''lit'' my room into a RGB wonderland and to me, 12V would have been brighter than 5V. Well considering the higher number. But now I understand what the difference is and I can make easier decisions!

    • @DrZzs
      @DrZzs  Před 6 lety

      Great!
      Mission accomplished!

  • @MrTenwisemen
    @MrTenwisemen Před 3 lety

    im so glad i find your video guide this is a big help for me for my project because i honestly not a techy nor good in electrical but when it comes with your clear explanation i find it simple. thank you 💖💖💖 from Philippines im your new Subscriber now. 😉👌

  • @essenceofveles
    @essenceofveles Před 3 lety +6

    This is was so helpful. I wish I could give two thumbs up.

  • @stevea8201
    @stevea8201 Před 2 lety

    Terrific, answered all of my questions perfectly!

  • @nawfel9971
    @nawfel9971 Před rokem

    Thanks you so much for the video!! ivz planed to do a cosplay project and hesistate between 5v and 12v to have brighter led decoration on my armor and you just made me understand things !

  • @kennethcoletrajano1119

    Thank you for this! I was really in the dark on what these dv voltages differ from each other!

  • @butchford757
    @butchford757 Před 5 lety +3

    Thanks for the refresher training. It has only been 35 years since my basic electronic training in the Navy. And like most things. Use it or lose it...

    • @DrZzs
      @DrZzs  Před 5 lety

      Time to start using it constantly then in all your new Smart Home projects!

    • @iamprawin
      @iamprawin Před 4 lety

      Uujjn

  • @LivingWaterEternal
    @LivingWaterEternal Před 6 lety

    Very well presented, straight forward presentation. Nicely done and informative, thank you.

  • @muralibommanna7789
    @muralibommanna7789 Před 4 lety +2

    Lovely video .Nice explanation with live demo.Wanted to do 200 feet led strip light for a hall and was thinking about 5 volts.Increase in voltage doesnot change brightness , the second lesson.Such a great help.Thanks for the nice Job DrZzs.

    • @DrZzs
      @DrZzs  Před 4 lety

      Glad to help!
      These are lessons I learned and figured others could use too.

  • @tomkar013
    @tomkar013 Před 5 lety +2

    Super helpful!! had no idea that the old pc sitting in my cupboard could solve all of my powering issues!

    • @DrZzs
      @DrZzs  Před 5 lety

      When all the other parts of an old PC are outdated and useless, the power supply is still worth keeping. I've gone to the Thrift store and bought old junk PC's for $10 just to get the power supply.

    • @tomkar013
      @tomkar013 Před 5 lety

      DrZzs yeah that’s a good idea, I think I might do that.

  • @1997MHz
    @1997MHz Před 5 lety +9

    Great explain on voltage drop :)

  • @kylelind20
    @kylelind20 Před 5 lety +3

    this was a great video! super helpful as I just realized i ordered 5v lights and a 12v PSU! oops, thankfully i have some extra pc PSUs around that I now know will do the trick! thanks so much

    • @DrZzs
      @DrZzs  Před 5 lety

      Thanks!
      ya, I'm sure you'll find a use for that 12v PS someday too!

  • @Cryptic78
    @Cryptic78 Před 3 lety +1

    Thanks for the clarification. This helped!

  • @nicklauscraig9157
    @nicklauscraig9157 Před 6 lety +5

    I used the 12v lights for my house which was about 80ft. It was a pain for me to run that extra set of wires. If I had to do it over I would have gone with 24v lights and probably have been okay without power injection for this length. I used a 12v to 5v voltage regulator from amazon to use the same power supply with my setup to power the wemos board. Keep up the great work on your videos!!

  • @zatoichiable
    @zatoichiable Před 3 lety

    So easy to understand... thanks

  • @3dFirefly
    @3dFirefly Před 3 lety +2

    EASY SOLUTION for 12v. I installed 12v WS2811 tube LED on a my house (ranch) meaning I had 4 (5 meter) strings, I connected the 5v Arduino nano to it simply by adding a DC-DC stepdown voltage regulator to LED string itself (at end where addressable input starts), I connected one 12v power supply in middle (between string 2 & 3)

  • @youvebeensubbedto8009
    @youvebeensubbedto8009 Před 3 lety

    Working on an Arduino light array-- extremely helpful video :)))

  • @ashleighrowe2565
    @ashleighrowe2565 Před 6 lety +23

    Very cool, awesome video as always, but 2 points i would add:
    (Yes im a nit picking sod)
    most LED strings used currently are of 2 types, adressable and R/G/B channel ones. The adressable ones (more expensive, but prettier) dont change their colour based on voltage, but based on data being sent at a lower voltage from a controller
    The channel ones dont "change their colour based on the voltage" the same 2v to 4v forward voltage is there, but is being toggled fast (via Pulse Width Modulation, or PWM) to give the appearance of the colour being dimmer
    The reason lights appear to be red when given too low of a voltage is because red LEDs turn on at a lower voltage, so are the only ones to turn on, as the voltage isnt high enough to turn on the green or blue LEDs, but that isnt the same effect as the PWM from the R/G/B channels from earlier
    Also, the other point: PC power supplies put out 3.3v not 3v, i know thats picky as all hell, but its a commonly misspoken thing in the tech communities, and ive had people in the past ask me about a psu they thought was faulty because they had been told it was meant to put out 3v not 3.3v

    • @DrZzs
      @DrZzs  Před 6 lety +9

      Haha. I'm happy to be nit picked by such a knowledgeable sod! You are welcome to correct my deficient knowledge anytime!
      Thanks!

    • @terry6520
      @terry6520 Před 5 lety +1

      Ashleigh - This video and your comment were both excellent. I just got two power supplies today (for two 5m 5050 rgb strips that I had), and when I hooked them up, I got exactly what you described - just red. The cause must be that I have 12v strips but 5v power supplies. Thank you for taking the time to put that out there.

  • @subbirrahman1289
    @subbirrahman1289 Před 3 lety

    That was a superb explanation bro.. Thanks

  • @Banjoba
    @Banjoba Před 4 lety

    Excellent video.very helpful.

  • @denistremblay4713
    @denistremblay4713 Před rokem

    Wow simple short and to the point thank you so much :-)

  • @JohnC-kc5uh
    @JohnC-kc5uh Před 4 lety

    Thanks for the helpful info

  • @kittytoy1480
    @kittytoy1480 Před 4 lety +9

    2:55 for everyone wondering about brightness and resistance

  • @nev0076
    @nev0076 Před 2 lety

    I got the answer thanks to you. Appreciate it sir.

  • @shamsheralamraja
    @shamsheralamraja Před 5 lety

    Good one, nicely explained.

    • @DrZzs
      @DrZzs  Před 5 lety

      Thanks. glad it's helpful.

  • @i3looi2
    @i3looi2 Před 8 měsíci

    Thank you for the explanation.. my concern was the distance. But seems my 3M will be covered by both solutions.
    Guess I'm going with the 12V since A) my controller can handle any range from 5v-24V and B) the 12V led strips are considerably cheaper.

  • @deadniell
    @deadniell Před 3 lety

    Can't believe i could learn A LOT in 6 minutes

  • @rokolczuk
    @rokolczuk Před 4 lety

    great video. I wish I watched it before doing the shopping :D

  • @J_AvilaN
    @J_AvilaN Před 10 měsíci

    Muchísimas Gracias, he aprendido mucho de usted a pesar de yo no saber inglés, saludos.

    • @DrZzs
      @DrZzs  Před 10 měsíci

      Thanks! Gald you learned something new!

  • @germas369
    @germas369 Před 3 lety

    Thank you, this is so useful

    • @DrZzs
      @DrZzs  Před 3 lety

      Glad it was helpful!

  • @jamespowis5360
    @jamespowis5360 Před 3 měsíci

    You do not need a second power supply, all you need is a buck converter or a voltage regulator to drop voltage from 12 to 5 volts. However most LED strips require a matched signal so you would need a MOSFET to raise the signal from 3.3v to 12v (this is also recommended for 5v LEDs if your controller is outputting 3.3v anyway).

  • @azryder5308
    @azryder5308 Před 2 lety

    Thanks for the video

  • @P_double_H
    @P_double_H Před 2 lety

    There goes my dream of running 12v addressable led strips on my home's fascia.

  • @cobbinaloic
    @cobbinaloic Před 3 lety

    Thanks that was helpful info

  • @user-rd3lj4gn4s
    @user-rd3lj4gn4s Před 4 lety +1

    It is the best experiment and good information for save our money!
    But the question remains - What to use in case when we need something brighter then ws2811/ws2812? (and not expensive). I try to create DJ facade 2x1 meter with 40x20 diodes (800pcs), but 0.3W per LED - it is to small. In AliExpress written “WS2811 with 12v it is 60mA*12v=0.6W”, but now I know that it is not true. But what to use?

  • @MegaKayShi
    @MegaKayShi Před 6 lety +1

    Thank DrZzs for the video! I'm your big fan. Btw, I just think about using Sonoff SV to control and supply the power for LED strings. Are we able to do this?

    • @DrZzs
      @DrZzs  Před 6 lety +1

      Thanks! I can't believe I have "fans". ;P
      You can totally use an SV to control LED strings. Just make sure you have a properly sized power supply. Watch the video I did with Tasmota on the D1mini. I used a string of ws2812 LEDs. Those are programmable LEDs so they do lots of colors and effects. They draw 20-60mA per LED. They have 3 wires. (+) (-) and (data). You can pass the (+) and (-) through the SV so they are switched by the relay. Then the (data) can connect to GPIO14.
      If you just want simple single color LEDs the SV works perfectly for them. I've got 3 of those set up at my house already.
      Hope that helps!

  • @ryandtheguys1781
    @ryandtheguys1781 Před 4 lety

    very informative thanks m8

  • @ronaldchand588
    @ronaldchand588 Před 3 lety

    I am a newbie in this. Correct me if Iam wrong. It makes sense that the brightness of the 5v and 12v pixels are same. If you inject power properly, I also understand the you will be able to run 2.4 times more pixels using 5v PSU than a 12vPSU as long as the power supply have the same output in terms of watts. E.g. A 300 watt 5v PSU can run 1000 pixels with multiple power injections however, a same 300 watt 12v PSU can run 416 pixels with lesser power injections. for argument sake say 0.06 amps per pixels. I am trying to make a best choice here. By the way, fantastic job with your videos..

  • @seekertosecrets
    @seekertosecrets Před 4 lety

    I won't need much wire to power some small LED light diodes if I use a A23 Battery. However, that might be an issue if want to use some LED strips.

  • @miguelgalvan9614
    @miguelgalvan9614 Před 3 lety

    Hello and thank you for the help on LED liChristmas

  • @michaelmohr7395
    @michaelmohr7395 Před 4 lety

    Using 5V LED strips I am going pretty long like 80ft, understand I should have bought 12V+ to make it easier, do I need to inject every 5m? Can I skip? I have a 5v 60A power supply and can get good color through 3? I tried to inject at end of 3 into 4 and it makes the last strand no receive the data and the coloring is all jacked up. Appreciate your time and passion on this I bought through your links hope I helped to fund a little :) - Mike

  • @kittytoy1480
    @kittytoy1480 Před 4 lety

    Thank you

  • @gempio2634
    @gempio2634 Před 2 lety

    Hey hey... you can get buck converters from 12v to 5v to solve the issue of the power supply and be pretty much golden. They're dirt cheap, they don't separate ground most of the time and you wont have extra space taken by yet another power supply.

  • @icefire5555
    @icefire5555 Před 4 lety

    To add to your point about 5v being able to directly power your micro controller. You could get a voltage step down board for a dollar or two and drop the 12v to 5v very efficiently.
    Also because of how you calculate Wattage. Volts*Amps=Watts. And wires melt at higher Amperages. For any longer protect you should use Higher voltage. If you push 5v through a wire, the longer it goes the harder the amperage is on the wire. Too many amps and the wire will blow like a fuse. (which comes with the risk of fires). But because the LEDs run at the same power, 12v offers almost 3x the wattage down the wire at the same amperage. (This is why telephone poles have thousands of volts on them)
    But I came here to see how many LEDs could make it in a 12v string and I wasn't disappointed. I enjoyed the video, Thumbs up from me!

    • @DrZzs
      @DrZzs  Před 4 lety

      Great info!
      Thanks!

  • @upendrachaudhari4635
    @upendrachaudhari4635 Před 4 lety

    this so upto the point under 7 mins....:)

  • @edwardschmidt4963
    @edwardschmidt4963 Před 4 lety

    I have 5v led rgb light strips for my hallway setup from a motion detector. The thing is the lights take way too long to get to it's full brightness??? When they are fully bright the colors are the same.

  • @LuckyGarageUSA
    @LuckyGarageUSA Před 3 lety

    Does voltage affect the heat output? will a 5v strip at max voltage be cooler than a 12v strip at full voltage?

  • @0106139
    @0106139 Před 4 lety

    Nice video!
    For my project I will need 200 LEDS with a wire length between pixels of 30cm. Will I get a significant a voltage drop if I connect 4 strings of 50 pixels parallel with 5v pixels? Or do I need 12v pixels? Thanks a lot

  • @danelokikischdesign
    @danelokikischdesign Před 5 lety

    Very helpful THX!

  • @tuphdc8779
    @tuphdc8779 Před 3 lety

    thank you

  • @jensschroder8214
    @jensschroder8214 Před 2 lety

    A 12 volt power supply and a 7805 regulator.
    It already existed in the 1980s and turns 12 volts into 5 volts.
    But it simply heats 7 volts away, so only connect a small load or use a heat sink.
    Today, however, there are also ready-made step-down circuits.

  • @gunsncodes6665
    @gunsncodes6665 Před 5 lety +4

    On 1:04 both power supplies have 20A.
    It means that the 12V supply have 12V*20A=240W and the 5V have only 5V*20A=100W.
    You can simply have more power with the same size of the power supply, same current and same diameter of the cables if you increase the voltage.

    • @timnerenberg
      @timnerenberg Před 5 lety

      And you doesn't even need a second power supply. A simple step down converter would do it anyways, if you're using a Controller with 5V

    • @andredornier
      @andredornier Před rokem

      So maybe you’re qualified to answer this question for me. If i go with the 12v would I require less amps to drive the same amount of leds vs 5v?

  • @DeKiesel
    @DeKiesel Před 3 lety +1

    Do you have a recommendation for which wire to use when running an extra wire?

  • @mettymaster6963
    @mettymaster6963 Před 3 lety +1

    Hey Doc, amazing video as usual! I have one question, if i have about 12 strips of ws2811 5V tension, can i run one parallel wire from the power supply and inject in each string or i will have to run multiple wires from the power supply because injection will have voltage drop eventually? Thanks!

    • @3rdWorldGamingHD
      @3rdWorldGamingHD Před 3 lety

      You will only need 1 wire for all 12 strip even if you inject each string. Just make sure you get a thick wire. 22 AWG or lower is recommended.

  • @user-hh9kw3cw9y
    @user-hh9kw3cw9y Před 4 lety

    I just bought a 1inch diameter circuit board with leds that's 12v, can I connect the red/black wires to a usb red/black wire and them work ?

  • @mountain_dweller
    @mountain_dweller Před 2 lety

    Excellent video!
    My question is about quality.
    All I'm wanting to do is to run about 15 ft of 5 volt warm white LEDs powered via a 5 volt USB from a 26000 mah power bank. Very simple situation. I'm just leery of buying whatever LEDs out of China from Amazon. I'm wondering if you know of a company that produces higher end LED strips of better quality. Thanks

  • @DavidGarate55
    @DavidGarate55 Před 6 lety

    Good video. I took your recommendation to buy the 5v lights which I will need to inject power anyway, so my purchase is justified. I am running about 125' with one string and I need to buy more lights so I can do my garage and the rest of my house. Hopefully I get this Hassbian thing figured out so I can start to install and run these lights.

    • @DrZzs
      @DrZzs  Před 6 lety

      Thanks!
      if you have trouble with your hassbian install let me know. I haven't done a video on that because Ben's is pretty good.
      czcams.com/video/tCGlQSsQ-Mc/video.html
      You'll probably be installing a newer version of Home Assistant. They changed "input.slider" to "input.number". So if you use my files you'll have to go in and change that in the config.yaml and the arduino sketch.
      I'm working on updating the yaml and sketch. I should have it done by next Monday.

    • @DavidGarate55
      @DavidGarate55 Před 6 lety

      I am going to try one more thing tonight. I tried the all-in-one script but it failed, something about "no such file" something may be wrong with the hass.io github repository.

    • @DrZzs
      @DrZzs  Před 6 lety +1

      I had trouble with HASS.io I'm sticking with my Hassbian install for now.
      Good luck. Maybe I need to do an install video. I'll put it on my list.

    • @DavidGarate55
      @DavidGarate55 Před 6 lety

      Please do a video, I followed Ben's instructions and also went by the Hassbian install site, home-assistant.io/docs/installation/hassbian/installation/ AND it does not connect... What could I possibly be missing? I have a hardwire connection. I downloaded the Hassbian image as a zip and flashed the card as the .zip file, I wonder if this what was wrong?

  • @dale3645
    @dale3645 Před 3 lety

    Some of the other videos (other “LED Guys”) say that the programming might have more and/or better programming with the 5V over 12V. Have you found that to be a problem with your 12V? I am mainly looking for CHRISTMAS but other holidays too. I like the idea of not using any power injection for 5 strands of String Lights.

  • @unobianconero5751
    @unobianconero5751 Před 3 lety

    can we run a 6V smd led on 5V supply without capacitor or any other stuff? is it be lighted up? max brightness? will the current be more than on 6V supply and does is need a resistor to limit it from draining more extra amps?

  • @petersjohnj
    @petersjohnj Před 3 lety

    Dr. Z. I made a huge mistake! First off I opted for off the shelf Twinkly RGB+w lights rather than just doing my own build. 2) I accidentally cut through all 3 wires about halfway through my strand. I am going to solder the cut wires but the lights aren’t marked at all so I’m not sure which one is volt+, ground, or data. How can i test to make sure I don’t damage the lights more than I already have?

  • @billligon4005
    @billligon4005 Před 2 lety

    I'm putting these LED lights in a HO model railroad cars to light up the interiors. They run on 12v, so if I cut the length to about 1 foot solder 12v power to them from the track, will they work???

  • @kriss1313
    @kriss1313 Před 4 lety

    And 24 V :) I wonder if for 24v longer strips are possible withoute power ingection.. like 15m.

  • @sokka50
    @sokka50 Před 2 lety +1

    Does the number of LEDs per meter matter? For example if I have 4-5m LED strips but with a high density of 144 LEDs/m. Would a 5V still work for that without extra feeding wires in between? I am an electrical noob, sorry :D

  • @gurpreetsaini5148
    @gurpreetsaini5148 Před 5 lety +1

    Hi buddy, you perfectly explained in video. I just want to make sure about my dreamlight project. I am bit confused between ws2811(12v) and ws2812b(5v), which led strip should good for my family roon ceiling perimeter about 15 meter. Basically, i prefered 5v strip bcoz its more consistent and LED's indivisually addressable, instead of 12v as set of 3leds. Please suggest me about the power supply Amps? if i go with 5V/15meter (60Leds/m ws2812b strip)...thanks

    • @baughhumbuglights8860
      @baughhumbuglights8860 Před 5 lety

      Calculate your power needs and get a power supply that will run at NO MORE THAN 75-80% of max rated output. For instance, if your strip needs 8A to power it, a 10A supply *should* be enough, but I would highly encourage you to get a 12-15A power supply.

  • @das_radiergummi
    @das_radiergummi Před rokem

    Well, 12V power suply can be used to power both, the strip and Controller by adding the stepdown/ buck converter in-between the supply and controller...

    • @das_radiergummi
      @das_radiergummi Před rokem

      ... which should be set to 5V or some has already a fixed voltage of 5V, The converters cost not much

  • @michaelluigeehernaez9479

    May I ask would it be good to use 12v ledstring (16units) to a 12v motorcycle battery?

  • @teabagNBG
    @teabagNBG Před 6 lety +1

    god im glad i saw this i forgott what kind of led i had... 5v or 12v... but since i also have wemos im sure i have 5v :D

    • @DrZzs
      @DrZzs  Před 6 lety

      Awesome!
      Crazy that they don't label them. I wonder what would happen if you connect 12v to the 5v lights. I'm guessing the magic smoke that makes them work would escape. Best not to try it...

  • @s0l1dsnak3
    @s0l1dsnak3 Před 3 lety

    I've also noticed that the 12v strings lump 3 pixels together per data block, so you can only change the colour in strings of 3

    • @GerbenBol
      @GerbenBol Před rokem

      I've read that somewhere else as well. Is that true for all of them? Because I can't see a reason not to go for 12V for my christmas lighting vs 5v. But if they're not individually, 5v it will be :(

  • @Moon-xc7pj
    @Moon-xc7pj Před 4 lety

    I don't know if you still answer any of these questions but i actually bought 10 m of 12v led strip and 2 m of 5v led strips, so i been wondering is the 5v strip going to explode or burned if i plug it with the 12v 10 m led strip?

  • @kanchisundhar
    @kanchisundhar Před 3 lety

    Sir Namaste , adapter 5v ok but which ams match for ws2811s led strip sir.

  • @eduardo_oliveira88
    @eduardo_oliveira88 Před 5 lety

    Hey, could you help me? I bought a h500p mesh, a gigabyte aorus gaming 5 z370 and a masterliquid 240m lite. The thing is that my mother board has only 3 pin rgn connectors or a 5 pin rgb connectors, while the fans have 4 pin connectors. What can I do, to be able to control all the fans' colors using the rgn fusion (gigabyte Motherboard software)? I'm really lost here! Thanks for the video by the way!

  • @HelloBiffTV
    @HelloBiffTV Před 4 lety

    How long does the data go though? When do you need to use a signal repeater?

  • @derekis1joedirt
    @derekis1joedirt Před rokem

    I just wire up the 5 volt strips in 4 series sets I figure the voltage drop on one strip is about 3 volts so 3x4=12 so they light at a decent brightness without any current protection

    • @derekis1joedirt
      @derekis1joedirt Před rokem

      But this is a dirty way to do it with no controller and can damage your lights from over current

  • @sharonwasag-unknownlocatio9394

    I'm new to this. I am trying to get a small strip of RGB new-pixels to run off of a 3V Microbit. I ordered new-pixels in the mail and received 12V ones. Will these work?

  • @cimen9793
    @cimen9793 Před rokem

    If we use 5m Led/m 60 leds can we use 5v for for the right color from start to finish or still should we use 12v?

  • @michaelrainey-wiles7704

    I'll be connecting six 6.5' LED stripes. They are 5v strips. Will my power supply still only be 5v or would I need to up the power? Thanks!

  • @titustide
    @titustide Před 3 lety

    I'm getting 144ct/1 meter LED's and only need to light up 1 meter. Will I be okay with only 5volts if I want to light them up at 100% brightness?

  • @luv14lyf
    @luv14lyf Před rokem

    So 24v is no brighter than 12v? When running the extra pair of wires, is that same pair used at the end of each string or is a separate pair needed for each string? So if 5 5v strings 5 separate pairs wires for power injection?

  • @sanderdemeer3783
    @sanderdemeer3783 Před 2 lety

    Goodafternoon. I have a question. I have a string of Christmas lights which have about 100 led’s. I really want to connect this string to an adapter but I really have no idea which one i need to buy. Currently the cheap Chinese light string runs on 240 volts but I really want to change that because it isn’t particularly safe😂. I’m planning to remove the entire module so that I’m only left with the LED string and I want to connect this to a 12v power supply. I can’t find anywhere what ampere value I need for this. What do you recommend me to use for this amount of led’s? As you might’ve noticed I’m not really an expert when it comes to electricity😅. I really hope you can help me out.
    I’m looking forward hearing from you😃.
    Sander

  • @AndersJackson
    @AndersJackson Před 6 lety

    Higher voltage transfer more energy with lower current. And that is why 12V don't loose that much energy in the resistance in the wire. And why the energy grid is on so high voltages (several 10 thousands volts). It is more efficient then to use low voltage and high current instead.

  • @GearGuy
    @GearGuy Před 5 lety +1

    Great video, but what about amperage draw considerations? If you want to drive, say 15 LEDStrips (Complete strips with 300 LEDs per strip), that would entail alot more amperage at 5v than at 12v... At some point the amperage draw becomes a real major concern. And also, at some point even voltage boost runs get too long.
    So I guess to put it as a question: What would be the best/safest (and most cost effective) way to power 15 LED strips (with 300 LEDs in each strip)?
    (Example: Accent/ceiling lighting around the circumference of an entire floor of a large house)
    All I have gleened from what I have read is that 24v led strips would likely support the longest runs with the best/safest voltage/amperage combinations... but 5v LEDS]s have some real nice advantages (individual light control thru PWM) that I would like to be able to use (even if it would require multiple interconnected data drivers to be able to keep the refresh rate acceptable).
    Feel free to post a link if you know of a detailed solution, but I have yet to find anyone/anysite that addresses (anything even remotely close to) that type of problem with a more or less concrete solution. Not looking for the soluion to the data I/O, just to the power/wiring requirements.

    • @DrZzs
      @DrZzs  Před 5 lety +3

      The dude who I think knows the most about higher voltage LEDs and good PWM control is Quindor - intermit.tech
      He has done his whole house in LED strips. If he doesn't have a video that covers what you're looking for you can probably contact him through email or on discord (www.discord.me/drzzs) - Quindor#4006
      I haven't used any 24v LED strips. I've become a fan of the 12v version for most things, but I haven't tried putting 4500 LEDs all from one source. My guess is you'll want to use multiple power supplies along the route. You might even try the holiday led show forums, those guys deal with high numbers of LEDs like that. www.doityourselfchristmas.com/forums/forum.php
      I'm not sure the individually addressable LEDs are available in 24v. Hopefully I'm wrong about that.
      Sorry I don't have the exact answer for you.

  • @RetroGamer75
    @RetroGamer75 Před 3 lety

    I have brought BTF-100-5 5v-20 dedicated to dot matrix, question is this I have another power supply Alitove 5v 60A 300W , problem is this 3.3FT or 144LEDs/m two of those need more 27 LEDs it come out 172 LEDs. Do I need Another PS? Today I brought wrong size 8 gauge it wouldn’t fit in PS. I end up returning it to Amazon. What is gauges, what size for LEDs. my strip is 3 pin 12mm, I am confuse why I need black/red wire? If power come from the wall. Thanks I like this video my English isn’t great due to deafness.

  • @MrJohnCatz
    @MrJohnCatz Před 4 lety +2

    I am looking to run rgbw strips under my kitchen cabinets ~ 15’. and I also want them to dim and run from phone and Alexa. What would you recommend using, and would you make a video ASAP..

    • @ingy23
      @ingy23 Před 4 lety +1

      If it was me I would use SK6812 and I would prob use 30LEDs per meter with a aluminium heat spreader with diffuser. It might require power injection at both ends if its 1 long run as these only run at 5V. Then just control them with a D1 mini running wled and a 10amp power supply.

  • @chepoez
    @chepoez Před 6 lety

    Great video!!
    What can I to with a 5V led string to increase the brightness?
    Will it work if increase the ampers?
    what if i use a 6V source?
    does the voltage only affect the color?

    • @DrZzs
      @DrZzs  Před 6 lety +1

      Thanks!
      As long as you're supplying the minimum voltage, the brightness is determined by the control signal. They do draw more current when they are brighter, but you can't supply more amps to make them brighter. Just doesn't work like that. You can try using 6v, but I don't think it'll make a difference. If you're running a long string you can try adding a source of 5v to the far end of the string. It can come from the same power supply, just run a pair of wires to the far end. If you have a multi meter measure the voltage at the end of your string of lights. If it measures close to 5v then you won't gain anything by adding more.
      That's about all I can think of to make them brighter.

    • @jjggbbjunk
      @jjggbbjunk Před 4 lety

      LEDs have an almost constant forward voltage drop. In a laboratory, you could vary the brightness by varying the current, but this is tricky to do. In practice, these lights increase brightness by increasing the percentage of time the LED is turned on using a process called Pulse Width Modulation. The LED is turned on and off too fast for the human eye to register, giving it an effective brightness. Each LED chip has a red, green, and blue LED. By altering the effective brightness of each of the LEDs in each little module, you can get a mix of colors. The LEDs will be as bright as they can get when they are on 100% of the time. Current while turned on is limited by electronic controls to protect the LEDs If you bump up the voltage above the maximum limit, the LEDs will be destroyed.

  • @jorgeferreira2009
    @jorgeferreira2009 Před 3 lety

    ... and I believe that (still 3 years later) the 12v aren't truly individually addressable led, right? The 5v are but the 12v are only each 3 leds can be controlled.

  • @arthursidortschuk5835
    @arthursidortschuk5835 Před 2 lety

    I gues it would be good to know that 12V lights get hotter than 5V because the Resistance of the Copper trace in flat LED strip is not enough to disapate the heat. Use 12V only if you have somthing that can take the heat away?! I feal like 5 Volt is always the answere for me.

  • @YutsiAion
    @YutsiAion Před 4 lety

    I'm sorry I am a noob here, I have ws2812b 5 meters led strip, and I use a 12v instead of 5v adaptor/power supply and then the led strips turned off/dead.. How should I do? is the led strip cannot be used again or I should buy a proper adaptor then the leds will turn on again?

    • @DrZzs
      @DrZzs  Před 4 lety

      If you connected 12v to 5v strips and they turned off, they are most likely dead. I've done the same thing. It is possible that some of them are not burnt out, but you have to go through each one individually and test them. You'll probably have to just buy a new strip. And double check the voltage on the PS and the strips match :)

    • @YutsiAion
      @YutsiAion Před 4 lety

      @@DrZzs Did you mean that I must cut the led one by one and test it through the 5v adaptor?
      the last time I tried to turn it on with a 5v adaptor, the leds blink several times then dead. I think I should go with 5v with 20a adapter, how about that?

  • @atomicdetailsoc
    @atomicdetailsoc Před rokem

    do you have a guide on how to use an old computer power supply for a controller? i have an old gateway in the garage and now i know what must be done LOL

    • @DrZzs
      @DrZzs  Před rokem

      Something like this maybe? www.amazon.com/CHENBO-Benchtop-Computer-Breakout-Adapter/dp/B07S91NQL3?tag=drzzs0e-20

  • @stevepusser4646
    @stevepusser4646 Před 3 lety

    good

  • @noahanderson2021
    @noahanderson2021 Před 3 lety

    Can I use a 12v amp to connect 2 5v strips?

  • @kupua
    @kupua Před 4 lety

    How can you do icicle lights?

  • @TheMFLAV
    @TheMFLAV Před 3 lety

    Wouldn't it be helpful to inject the 12v system as well to keep it at maximum brightness? I'm defiantly doing this after this season.

    • @mikewalcott
      @mikewalcott Před rokem

      Did you end up injecting. We are in the process of getting our lights up but still can’t decide between 5v or 12v. I will have more than 2000 lights.

  • @v4v3velom58
    @v4v3velom58 Před 3 lety

    Can i used 12vdc 20Amp for pixel led controller T1000s?

  • @YourLocalDominos
    @YourLocalDominos Před 4 lety

    If I'm trying to run four 5 volt LED strip strips (1,200 LEDs total) off a battery pack and I want this to run this for 3 hours on any color combination (addressable LEDs) what type of battery pack would you recommend? I'm using a simple in-line wireless RF controller. I would assume based on this video I would need to run additional power lines from the battery pack to each of the four different LED strips to maintain consistent power. any help would be great. If you know of a specific battery pack that's on Amazon that you can reference please include a link.

    • @DrZzs
      @DrZzs  Před 4 lety

      That's a TON of LEDs to try and run off a battery. Here's the math: each LED will use an average of 20 milliamps, or 0.02 amps, so if you have 1200 leds, that's 1200 x 0.02 = 24 amps. Now to size the battery. A 24 amp-hour battery would last 1 hour. I don't even know if you can buy a 5v 24 amp-hour battery. Probably not from Amazon anyway. If you want to power that many LEDs, you might want to consider a generator instead of a battery.
      something like this would probably last about 2-3 hrs: amzn.to/2yZutpY
      You'd also need a DC-DC converter to drop the 24v output to 5v for your LEDs. If you want 3 hrs, you need somewhere around 72 amp-hours at 5v. You could also use 3 of these: amzn.to/2KB3hnS
      that would give you 3 hrs and you wouldn't need a DC-DC converter.
      Good luck!

  • @regmiles
    @regmiles Před 5 lety

    Hello, Thanks for that info. My projects are small. So distance isn't a problem. I'm liking what I'm seeing in a 5V 8x32 pixel WS2812B 5050 RGB Flexible LED Panel Matrix Programmable Display Screen. But I'd like to run this via a battery pack. The seller recommends a 5V 15A power supply. Is there a battery pack available that can run this panel?
    Thanks
    Reg

    • @DrZzs
      @DrZzs  Před 5 lety

      I'm sure you can find a battery pack, but you may need to hunt a bit. When you size the battery calculate 60 milliamps per LED x the number of hours you want the leds to run. That'll give you a number in amp-hours.