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Raspberry Pi Forum RasPi and PWM controlled LED strip
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Related

RasPi and PWM controlled LED strip

freddyfred5
freddyfred5 over 11 years ago

Hello there people, I am currently working on a casemod, and I would like to use a RasPi as the controller for some LED strips (12v, pulling about 700ma each).

 

The RasPi will act as a webserver hosting a website for remotely controlling the strips, as well as viewing some information about the system (temp sensors, fan speed. don't care about these, they are up and running). But it will also control 2 12v LED strips, and these strips pull too much for the RasPi to control directly.

 

Now, I do have some TIP120's here, and as far as I can see they should work, but I am unsure of how to connect them.

 

Could someone here please help me with getting everything set up properly?

 

Parts:

PSU: Corsair CX

RasPi: Rev 1, model B

Lights: 12v, pulling around 700ma each

 

Wanted outcome:

PWM control on one LED strip

Normal (on, off) on the other

A living RasPi

 

Questions:

Could you help me set this up in a way that does not any part?

Do I need a capacitor in front of the RasPi to ensure no harm is done under startup? (Will 4700 microfarads do?)

Should I use a fuse, or is it unnecessary?

Am I asking too many questions?

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  • Robert Peter Oakes
    0 Robert Peter Oakes over 11 years ago

    Easiest thing I can recommend is to use an ULN2003 8 channel driver chip, quite cheap and available everywhere

    you can gang channels together for more current handling and each channel will handle about 500mA (So 4A total)

    look here for details http://www.newark.com/stmicroelectronics/uln2003a/darlington-transistor-array-npn/dp/89K1130

     

    you may need to search you local branch, just search for ULN2003

     

    directly logic compatible and will handle well over 12 volts for the supply of the devices being driven and much simpler to interface then individual transistors (No resistors except perhaps to limit the LED current

     

    power the PI from a separate adapter than the LEDs and other loads, it will be much more stable and less lightly to blow the PI and then you do not need a capacitor on that line.

     

    only have the grounds of the PI and LED supply connected together.

     

    You probably can use any available GPIO for the ON/OFF and there is one GPIO that supports PWM, this too can directly drive the 2003 chip

    see http://raspberrypi.stackexchange.com/questions/298/can-i-use-the-gpio-for-pulse-width-modulation-pwm for details on PWM

     

    if you still want to use the TIP120 then put a 2K2 resistor (Approx.) between the output of the PI to the Base of the TIP120, connect the emitter to ground and the collector to the LED's low side, connect the high side of the LEDs to the 12V. Make sure there is something to limit the LED current if there not pre wired to sun on 12V supply (I don't know the brand or configuration you using) The ULN2003 contains 8 channels of drivers and there all Darlington pairs so very high gain, plus they contain all resistors etc to drive the load from a simple logic output so you wont need resistors between GPIO and the 2003 for instance (Simpler to use)

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  • Problemchild
    0 Problemchild over 11 years ago in reply to Robert Peter Oakes

    Peter I would note the manufacturer's de-rating curves for temperature/Duty Cycle/number of outputs and I think you'll find it's current switching capacity for this application to be much much less than the optimal 4A.

    Also he does  not specify the number of light strips which are normally at 1A+ per Metre.

    Larger descrete FETs may well be the way to go !

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  • Robert Peter Oakes
    0 Robert Peter Oakes over 11 years ago in reply to Problemchild

    this is all for illuminating the inside of a computer case for a mod hack, so not too many LEDs and stuff the devices recommended should be ok for this purpose

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  • Robert Peter Oakes
    0 Robert Peter Oakes over 11 years ago in reply to Problemchild

    this is all for illuminating the inside of a computer case for a mod hack, so not too many LEDs and stuff the devices recommended should be ok for this purpose

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  • Problemchild
    0 Problemchild over 11 years ago in reply to Robert Peter Oakes

    I was working on the "several strips" at 700ma ea and mapping on to the curves in the Data Sheet

    Fullscreen 4478.contentimage_176476.html Download
    <html><head><title>Jive SBS</title></head>
    <body><font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif">
    <b>Error</b><br><font size="-1">
    An general error occurred while processing your request.
    </font></font></body></html>
    

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