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Ask an Expert Forum Help Using WS2811 to drive 12v RGB LED strip
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  • driver
  • mosfet
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Help Using WS2811 to drive 12v RGB LED strip

dmilton2004
dmilton2004 over 10 years ago

Greetings all,

 

I am creating a lighting project that I want to have a wall display with large (15" x 20") panels and each panel acts as its own "pixel" (controlled by one WS2811).

 

I had purchased 12v RGB LED strips with 30 LEDs per meter. What I want do is control a section of the RGB strip (about 15 LEDs). I have been scouring the web for possible solutions. One avenue I was looking at was using MOSFETs to drive the strip from the PWM outputs from the WS2811. There is an example in the WS2811 datasheet that shows using 3 LEDs per color with 12v. I do know that the WS2811 is a constant current source device. My thought was to use a logic level N-channel MOSFET to drive the LED strip. This is just based upon the research that I have done. What I have not found was any schematic to go from. I am looking at possible 3 MOSFETs per WS2811.

 

Any help and schematics would greatly help!

 

Thanks in advance!

 

Don

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  • Former Member
    Former Member over 10 years ago +3 suggested
    I was able to make this work by using a simple NOT gate between the WS2811 chip and the mosfet. I believe this works because it is using TTL (transistor based logic). The WS2811 requires some kind of load…
  • Robert Peter Oakes
    Robert Peter Oakes over 10 years ago in reply to michaelkellett +2
    More LEDS in series means less current, thinner wires and a single switch, so 12V = 3-4 LEDS per channel, using a chip like ULN2003 will provide all the drive for a single board probably Using logic levels…
  • dmilton2004
    dmilton2004 over 10 years ago in reply to dragonstyne +2 suggested
    Thanks Steve. I have not tried to trigger the MOSFETs yet, but that was my next plan. I should be able to do that by applying +5v to the Gate and connecting the Source to GND. I should see voltage flow…
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  • Former Member
    0 Former Member over 10 years ago

    I was able to make this work by using a simple NOT gate between the WS2811 chip and the mosfet. I believe this works because it is using TTL (transistor based logic). The WS2811 requires some kind of load to create a PWM signal just like  shabaz said and connecting it right to a Mosfet gate is like plugging it into a black hole. The NOT gate (consisting of two transistors and two resistors) completes the circuit and inverts the signal.

     

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  • Former Member
    0 Former Member over 10 years ago

    I was able to make this work by using a simple NOT gate between the WS2811 chip and the mosfet. I believe this works because it is using TTL (transistor based logic). The WS2811 requires some kind of load to create a PWM signal just like  shabaz said and connecting it right to a Mosfet gate is like plugging it into a black hole. The NOT gate (consisting of two transistors and two resistors) completes the circuit and inverts the signal.

     

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