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You are welcoome peteski.Ian, I will try to take a pic tonight. I need to buy another set as I fried the remaining 14 while trying to test their voltage, as peteski knows, I am electronically challenged. The remaining four are being used as a light source for a tube I am using to look for light leaks in my daughter's clarinet, the original reason I bought them. I can take a picture of that, but they are encased in a clear vinyl tube and that may affect their color. Maybe I'll try to put one in a GHQ headlight housing.
When wired in series would a single resistor act for all of the LEDs in the strand? Would I need a resistor between each LED? If I open up the battery pack for the set, would the resisitor be easily identifiable, if there is one there? I suppose I could test the output from the battery pack in terms of ohm? I'm clueless where to set my multimeter except when measuring voltage.
Max, nah, I just ran them with throttle leads right from my Tech II. Duh. I'm not sure if I even have an assortment of resistors that I could use.Captain Obvious has much more brains than I WRT electronics. I just can't seem to get the concept. When wired in series would a single resistor act for all of the LEDs in the strand? Would I need a resistor between each LED? If I open up the battery pack for the set, would the resisitor be easily identifiable, if there is one there? I suppose I could test the output from the battery pack in terms of ohm? I'm clueless where to set my multimeter except when measuring voltage.I can test the next set easily enough if I know what to do.
All, sorry for the crude representation but they are wired like this. One side of the equals sign is positive and the other negative. The strands of magnet wire are parallel and the SMD LED is soldered on at 4" intervals:O=========O==========O==========O===========BATTERY PACK>> 3 AA bats. This would mean they are parallel?There is switch off the circuit board inside that has ON/BLINK/VARIABLE