[ot] life of bright LED

Alma J Wetzker almaw
Mon May 14 18:30:16 PDT 2007


Ric Moore wrote:
> On Mon, 2007-05-14 at 08:22 -0700, Tony Alfrey wrote:
>> Man-wai Chang wrote:
>>>> Read the specs that come with the part.  Depends on the current. 
>>> But how do you know the part number? There is no word on the LED... :)
>>>
>>>
>> Oh.  I thought you were building something from new parts.
>> If you want assurance that the part will last for some particular time, 
>> you could always replace it with some known part.  But remember that you 
>> will also need to be able to measure the operating current (and 
>> temperature can also be a big issue in high-power applications).
>>
>> What exactly are you trying to do?
> 
> I just bought a LED to light up a chrome statuette hood ornament from a
> 1940's vehicle (I think it was a LeSalle?) that is this winged flying
> woman of <ahem> slender build... there is a square opening in the back
> where I am going to put that LED and put some red plastic to close the
> opening. Then I'll wire it to my brights to remind me that I have them
> on. It's classier than some old bull horns mounted up front, I think. 
> 
> What would be really cool is to mount a weather proof speaker under the
> hood and have the "Flight of the Valkyries" play for 10 seconds when I
> hit the brights and have the LED pulse with the amplitude. If I could
> teach Murphy, my co-pilot chocolate lab, to howl out the window at the
> same time, how cool would that be?? Answer: ICE COLD! <cackles> 
> 
> It gets really boring out here at the Happy Farm.  Ric
>  

It is, however, the most sane comment on this thread.

    -- Alma



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