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Ask an Expert Forum How could I install a new 12 volt backlight?
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  • monitor
  • power
  • backlighting
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How could I install a new 12 volt backlight?

bwarren97
bwarren97 over 10 years ago

I have a 1080p monitor that I really really liked, until its backlight started being a butthead. So, I decided to take out the old backlight, and stick in an aftermarket one. I thought it would be nice and simple, until I realized that the LED driver ran on 12 volts and there was no 12 volt output anywhere on the monitor (the original LED was driven by 80 volts).
I have confirmed that the backlight works by jump-wiring it to a PC power supply, but I need a somewhat space-saving method of driving it within the monitor case using its own power supply so that it turns on and off with the monitor. I would like to just solder a 12 volt regulator directly onto the 80 volt output, but I don't know if there is a small chip capable of providing sufficient power or stepping down that much voltage. Any ideas?

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  • mcb1
    mcb1 over 10 years ago in reply to bwarren97 +2 suggested
    An optocoupler (as you discovered when you seardhed it) provides isolation between sides (LED) and the other (Transistor/Tirac/SCR). They come in various forms and some are much more sensitive than others…
  • shabaz
    shabaz over 10 years ago +1
    You can apply ohm's law and the power equation and see immediately you have a very high amount of power to dissipate as cmay77 mentions - heatsinks and fan time basically. So, theoretically possible with…
  • shabaz
    shabaz over 10 years ago in reply to bwarren97 +1
    By connecting to a 80V supply, even if your backlight draws just 0.3A (4W), your heatsink will need to dissipate more than 20W - that's a huge heatsink. Furthermore, the supply you measured is probably…
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  • mudz
    0 mudz over 10 years ago

    Hi Blake,
    Why so much hassle. You can build a small voltage divider circuit using resistors only to drop down the voltage near 18-24 volts. Then you can use bridge rectifier & 12v voltage regulator to get 12 volts.
    Once I used my Laptop charger to drive my 5" TFT backlight(19volts). image
    Note:- Be careful while choosing Resistor wattage.

     

    mudz

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  • supper_slash
    0 supper_slash over 9 years ago in reply to mudz

    Although a voltage divider circuit would work, in order to provide 13.33v at 133.00ma you would be burning 10-15 watts of heat off of the main 500-ohm resistor, and as of right now we do not know how that voltage strong nor reagulated that voltage rail is, the less stress we place on it the more likely that we will not over tax something else.


    So I would suggest Installing an opto, and converter.

    That's how I would do it.

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  • supper_slash
    0 supper_slash over 9 years ago in reply to mudz

    Although a voltage divider circuit would work, in order to provide 13.33v at 133.00ma you would be burning 10-15 watts of heat off of the main 500-ohm resistor, and as of right now we do not know how that voltage strong nor reagulated that voltage rail is, the less stress we place on it the more likely that we will not over tax something else.


    So I would suggest Installing an opto, and converter.

    That's how I would do it.

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