LED Taillights, Custom Made for the 914 |
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LED Taillights, Custom Made for the 914 |
Spoke |
Jan 26 2013, 02:40 AM
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#201
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Jerry Group: Members Posts: 7,081 Joined: 29-October 04 From: Allentown, PA Member No.: 3,031 Region Association: None |
I've wanted to convert my 914 taillights to LED for a while but never got around to it.
Finally I started working on the design of the taillights. This will be a single custom PCB for each side and will have all the LEDs and control circuits on it. One PCB will be used for both sides. The plan is to remove the existing plastic reflector and bulb assembly and mount a custom board in its place. With proper standoffs, I should be able to mount the board using the same 2 screw holes that secure the reflector. I'm trying to decide now how many LEDs to use for each purpose. Right now, I have 8 LEDs for the backup lights, 20 LEDs for the running/Brake lights, 24 LEDs for the turnsignals, and 4 LEDs for the side marker. I've been observing modern cars with LED taillights and some use a few LEDs (like 8) and some a lot (+20). I would like your opinions on how many LEDs you think would be good to use. On the board below, the LEDs are spaced about 0.7 inches apart. These will be medium brightness white LEDs. (I'll let the lenses provide the color). The first cut at the board is shown below for the driver's side. The side marker LEDs will be right angle LEDs pointing out the side of the board. They can be seen on the extreme left side of the board. If these work out, I could manufacture them for World members. One thing though, they won't be cheap. The LEDs are about $0.50 through Digikey and there are more than 55 LEDs on each right now. Plus there's 2 dc-dc converters for providing constant current for the tail/brake and turnsignal LEDs. Cheers (IMG:style_emoticons/default/beerchug.gif) Attached thumbnail(s) |
HarveyH |
Jan 29 2013, 12:17 PM
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#202
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Member Group: Members Posts: 450 Joined: 19-June 03 From: Downingtown, PA Member No.: 843 |
You might consider doing your testing with red LED's. The white LED's produce light in many wavelenghts. The red lens filters out all of the light except for the red wavelengths. If you start with an LED of a given wattage a specific color LED you should get more light in the wavelengths you need.
From the Superbriteleds page: Harvey |
7TPorsh |
Jan 29 2013, 12:25 PM
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#203
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7T Porsh Group: Members Posts: 2,691 Joined: 27-March 06 From: Glendale Ca Member No.: 5,782 Region Association: Southern California |
You might consider doing your testing with red LED's. The white LED's produce light in many wavelenghts. The red lens filters out all of the light except for the red wavelengths. If you start with an LED of a given wattage a specific color LED you should get more light in the wavelengths you need. From the Superbriteleds page: Harvey Always wondered about this. Does this mean the same when using regular bulbs? If I use red incandescent bulbs; are they better than clear? |
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