Skip to main content
Tweeted twitter.com/StackElectronix/status/773353737092001794
deleted 4 characters in body
Source Link
Vilx-
  • 765
  • 1
  • 8
  • 14

When I was young and learning about electricity, a fabulous tool for understanding voltage/current/resistance was an incandescent lightbulb (in my case it was a small 3V bulb). When you doubled the voltage by putting two batteries in series, it glowed twice4x as bright, but heated up more and was more prone to burning out. When you put two lightbulbs in series, they glowed half1/4 as bright. When you put them in parallel, they glowed normally, but drained the battery twice as fast. Etc.

This day and age however incandescent bulbs are on the way out, and LEDs are replacing them for a good reason (like not burning out every few months or so). But LEDs are different and follow different rules, which I don't understand myself very well.

I was wondering - can LEDs be used in the same way? I know that for a LED to be usable in a similar way as a classical lightbulb, you need to put it in series with a resistor, otherwise it draws too much current and burns out. I think you can even buy LEDs with built-in resistors. But would they work in the same fashion? Would changes in voltage be accompanied with corresponding changes in brightness?

When I was young and learning about electricity, a fabulous tool for understanding voltage/current/resistance was an incandescent lightbulb (in my case it was a small 3V bulb). When you doubled the voltage by putting two batteries in series, it glowed twice as bright, but heated up more and was more prone to burning out. When you put two lightbulbs in series, they glowed half as bright. When you put them in parallel, they glowed normally, but drained the battery twice as fast. Etc.

This day and age however incandescent bulbs are on the way out, and LEDs are replacing them for a good reason (like not burning out every few months or so). But LEDs are different and follow different rules, which I don't understand myself very well.

I was wondering - can LEDs be used in the same way? I know that for a LED to be usable in a similar way as a classical lightbulb, you need to put it in series with a resistor, otherwise it draws too much current and burns out. I think you can even buy LEDs with built-in resistors. But would they work in the same fashion? Would changes in voltage be accompanied with corresponding changes in brightness?

When I was young and learning about electricity, a fabulous tool for understanding voltage/current/resistance was an incandescent lightbulb (in my case it was a small 3V bulb). When you doubled the voltage by putting two batteries in series, it glowed 4x as bright, but heated up more and was more prone to burning out. When you put two lightbulbs in series, they glowed 1/4 as bright. When you put them in parallel, they glowed normally, but drained the battery twice as fast. Etc.

This day and age however incandescent bulbs are on the way out, and LEDs are replacing them for a good reason (like not burning out every few months or so). But LEDs are different and follow different rules, which I don't understand myself very well.

I was wondering - can LEDs be used in the same way? I know that for a LED to be usable in a similar way as a classical lightbulb, you need to put it in series with a resistor, otherwise it draws too much current and burns out. I think you can even buy LEDs with built-in resistors. But would they work in the same fashion? Would changes in voltage be accompanied with corresponding changes in brightness?

Source Link
Vilx-
  • 765
  • 1
  • 8
  • 14

Does LED brightness change with voltage?

When I was young and learning about electricity, a fabulous tool for understanding voltage/current/resistance was an incandescent lightbulb (in my case it was a small 3V bulb). When you doubled the voltage by putting two batteries in series, it glowed twice as bright, but heated up more and was more prone to burning out. When you put two lightbulbs in series, they glowed half as bright. When you put them in parallel, they glowed normally, but drained the battery twice as fast. Etc.

This day and age however incandescent bulbs are on the way out, and LEDs are replacing them for a good reason (like not burning out every few months or so). But LEDs are different and follow different rules, which I don't understand myself very well.

I was wondering - can LEDs be used in the same way? I know that for a LED to be usable in a similar way as a classical lightbulb, you need to put it in series with a resistor, otherwise it draws too much current and burns out. I think you can even buy LEDs with built-in resistors. But would they work in the same fashion? Would changes in voltage be accompanied with corresponding changes in brightness?