Testing LEDs on the bench
Excuse my COMPLETE stupidity on this subject, but I apparently missed this in grade school!
I purchased some LED strips, etc. from Oznium that I want to test on the bench. I do not have a spare car battery and did not want to take up that much space unless necessary.
If I touch the wires from one of my LEDs to a small 9V battery, it lights up. I purchased one of those large 6V lantern batteries yesterday, but when I try that I get nothing.
(1) Is that normal for the 6V battery to not light up an LED designed for a 12V system at all, or do I have a bad battery?
(2) When testing with the smaller (sized) 9V battery (smoke alarm type), when the LED lights up, will it be the same brightness as with a 12V battery in the car?
(3) Are there any type of 12V sources I can buy to use for bench testing that don't take up much space?
Thanks... Sorry I am so stupid on this!
Excuse my COMPLETE stupidity on this subject, but I apparently missed this in grade school!
I purchased some LED strips, etc. from Oznium that I want to test on the bench. I do not have a spare car battery and did not want to take up that much space unless necessary.
If I touch the wires from one of my LEDs to a small 9V battery, it lights up. I purchased one of those large 6V lantern batteries yesterday, but when I try that I get nothing.
(1) Is that normal for the 6V battery to not light up an LED designed for a 12V system at all, or do I have a bad battery?
(2) When testing with the smaller (sized) 9V battery (smoke alarm type), when the LED lights up, will it be the same brightness as with a 12V battery in the car?
(3) Are there any type of 12V sources I can buy to use for bench testing that don't take up much space?
Thanks... Sorry I am so stupid on this!
You can get a battery that is smaller then a AAA battery that is 12v at home depot I believe. Used mainly for remotes.
They look like this.
And yes, if they have resistors built in, you are cutting down the 9v power and not reaching full brightness the 12-14v a car would be putting out, which would be resisted to around a final voltage of 3.5v is my guess.
If this is the leds on a roll type strip, I have built shoes that light up off that small 12v battery. They were BRIGHT!
Last edited by bill mcdonald; Jun 21, 2015 at 03:57 AM.














