Thought rather than spam the main hue thread, I'd start one for this.
Following on from my last post where I'd misplaced my traco dc-dc convertors, I did indeed have a board I designed with one on, so out came the hot air gun and off came the convertor.
I can now stick everything onto the veroboard which will make life easier. I need to grab some different led strips so that I can just confirm the output interfacing for strips based on less other than the APA102 which is what I have.
Using this DC/DC convertor means that a single power supply can be used for both the LED's and the controller as it has a wide input range, LED strips are power hungry to will be powered direct from the power supply and a feed off that will supply the power for this. LED strips come in a variety of different voltages, 5V, 12V, 24V. The caveat is that a controller will only control LED's of the same voltage unless you splice the positive rail directly onto the strip/strip connector rather than use the terminals that I will provide.
I'm also going to be cheeky and call the project "hju"....which is the phonetic spelling of HUE!
Following on from my last post where I'd misplaced my traco dc-dc convertors, I did indeed have a board I designed with one on, so out came the hot air gun and off came the convertor.
I can now stick everything onto the veroboard which will make life easier. I need to grab some different led strips so that I can just confirm the output interfacing for strips based on less other than the APA102 which is what I have.
Using this DC/DC convertor means that a single power supply can be used for both the LED's and the controller as it has a wide input range, LED strips are power hungry to will be powered direct from the power supply and a feed off that will supply the power for this. LED strips come in a variety of different voltages, 5V, 12V, 24V. The caveat is that a controller will only control LED's of the same voltage unless you splice the positive rail directly onto the strip/strip connector rather than use the terminals that I will provide.
I'm also going to be cheeky and call the project "hju"....which is the phonetic spelling of HUE!