Volitions Advocate
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I'm building an LED array for a project at school and I'm having some trouble with figuring out what to use for a power source.
Each LED has a 1.5V drop and draws 100 mA.
I'll be making an array of around 120 of them.
My plan is to wire them up in parallel banks of 6 - 8, I don't want to use a resistor for every LED, but I do want parallel circuits so I can easily see which LED dies if one ever does, and fix it. I've attached my schematic (which might not be perfectly accurate, im' still learning how to do this)
If I have 15 - 16 of those circuits wired up in parallel from the power source then things should work well.
But I need a power source.
I was thinking at first to just use a wall wart and hard wire it into the array, but most wall warts only supply around 500 mA of current. So a whole 5 LED's in and I'm done. I found This power supply here:
http://www.ledssuperbright.com/led-power-supply-c-20/12v-150w-power-supply-12-5a-p-235?zenid=12ea276960d3566ebea66e70fb814212
Which would work, I'm pretty sure. But some of the guys who do projects like the one I'm doing say they just use a laptop power supply. the the ones I see only supply about 3.5 amps.
Here's my Question: if each LED draws 100 mA and I have 120 of them. Does that mean that I will be drawing 12 Amps of power when I run them all? Or does it not work quite that way? Logically I would assume so, but I'm not an expert.
EDIT: I found a better way to ask my question. Does current drop the same way that voltage does across circuit components?
Each LED has a 1.5V drop and draws 100 mA.
I'll be making an array of around 120 of them.
My plan is to wire them up in parallel banks of 6 - 8, I don't want to use a resistor for every LED, but I do want parallel circuits so I can easily see which LED dies if one ever does, and fix it. I've attached my schematic (which might not be perfectly accurate, im' still learning how to do this)
If I have 15 - 16 of those circuits wired up in parallel from the power source then things should work well.
But I need a power source.
I was thinking at first to just use a wall wart and hard wire it into the array, but most wall warts only supply around 500 mA of current. So a whole 5 LED's in and I'm done. I found This power supply here:
http://www.ledssuperbright.com/led-power-supply-c-20/12v-150w-power-supply-12-5a-p-235?zenid=12ea276960d3566ebea66e70fb814212
Which would work, I'm pretty sure. But some of the guys who do projects like the one I'm doing say they just use a laptop power supply. the the ones I see only supply about 3.5 amps.
Here's my Question: if each LED draws 100 mA and I have 120 of them. Does that mean that I will be drawing 12 Amps of power when I run them all? Or does it not work quite that way? Logically I would assume so, but I'm not an expert.
EDIT: I found a better way to ask my question. Does current drop the same way that voltage does across circuit components?