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How to make an inexpensive but very powerful LED lamp

For almost a year now, I began to replace all the lamps in the house with LED ones. The results pleased sometimes more, sometimes less, but one case led me to an interesting solution.

The reason why I took on the LED lamp


How to make an inexpensive but very powerful LED lamp

How often do you or someone from your family accidentally knock over a table lamp? Speaking of me, quite a few times ... Therefore, when my child once again dropped my table lamp with the innocent “Oh!”, I said: “Enough!”
Warning! Fluorescent lamps use mercury, which is very toxic.
If you accidentally or deliberately break such a lamp, it is recommended to ventilate the room well to save it from toxic fumes.
I decided to replace the fluorescent lamp of my desk lamp with something more shockproof ...
My lamp must withstand the handling of a 10-year-old child, and at the same time emit enough light for convenient work at the desk, work stably and cost inexpensively. A couple of years ago, this problem did not have a simple solution, but now the answer is obvious - this is an LED lamp.

Materials


How to make an inexpensive but very powerful LED lamp

How to make an inexpensive but very powerful LED lamp

How to make an inexpensive but very powerful LED lamp

I decided to use with a maximum luminous flux of 278 lm, which remained with me from the last project. The LED will be placed on a 5 x 5 cm cooling radiator that was removed from an old PC.
For simplicity, I decided to use a pulse charger for the phone, which will provide voltage and amperage sufficient for the LED lamp. For this purpose, I used a non-working Siemens A52 charger, with a declared output of 5 V and a current of 420 mA.
The cartridge of the old fluorescent lamp will serve to protect the electronics.
Measurements
According to the factory specifications, the Cree MX6 Q5 can be powered by a source with a maximum current of 1 A and a voltage of 4.1 V. I figured that I would need a resistor with a resistance of 1 Ohm to reduce the voltage by 1 V (from 5 V that the power source supplied ) up to 4.1 V consumed by the LED, if only the power supply can withstand a current of 1 A.
To check the maximum allowable current strength that the power supply can withstand, I connected various resistors to its terminals, in each case measuring the voltage and calculating the current strength.
I was surprised to find that the power supply is designed in such a way as to limit the current strength at the level of 0.6 A, with which it normally copes. Carrying out studies in this way with other telephone chargers, I learned that all of them have a current limit of 20% to 50% higher than what was stated by the manufacturer. This makes sense, since each manufacturer designs the power supply so that it does not get too hot, even if the power supply is broken, including from a short circuit. And the easiest way to ensure this is to limit the current strength.
Thus, I had a direct current generator with a current limitation of up to 0.6 A, very efficient (the power supply of the mobile phone is not very hot during use), powered directly from the 220 V AC source, manufactured at the factory and very small in size . And it’s just perfect.

Lamp making


How to make an inexpensive but very powerful LED lamp

How to make an inexpensive but very powerful LED lamp

How to make an inexpensive but very powerful LED lamp

To begin, I took apart the power supply to remove the insides and insert them into a new lamp. Since most power supplies are glued during assembly, I used a hacksaw blade to open it.
In order for the board to fit in the lamp base, some adjustments had to be made.
To fix the board inside the cartridge, I used a silicone sealant, which remains very resistant at high temperatures. Before closing the base, I attached a heat sink (with a screw) to its cover, on which the LED was fixed.

Result: table lamp


How to make an inexpensive but very powerful LED lamp

How to make an inexpensive but very powerful LED lamp

How to make an inexpensive but very powerful LED lamp

Here is the lamp assembly. Energy consumption does not exceed 2.5 W, and lighting is 190 lm, ideal for an economical and reliable table lamp. And all this in an hour of operation, with the exception of the hardening of the silicone sealant and the drying of the hot glue, which was used to fix the LED on the cooling radiator.
I was so encouraged by the success and simplicity of the project that a few hours later, I already had another lamp.

Result: Hallway


How to make an inexpensive but very powerful LED lamp

How to make an inexpensive but very powerful LED lamp

How to make an inexpensive but very powerful LED lamp

Impressed by the results, in the same way I continued to replace several fluorescent lamps in my apartment. I will present them, dwelling on only some details.
For the luminaire in the hallway, I used two Cree MX6 Q5 elements with an energy consumption of 3 W and a maximum luminous flux of 278 lm. Each is powered by an old Samsung mobile phone charger. Despite the fact that the manufacturer declared a current strength of 0.7 A, I found by measurements that the limitation was set to 0.75 A.
Everything is fixed with a textile fastener (Velcro), glue and plastic mounts for the motherboard.
The total energy consumption of the structure is 6 W with a luminous flux of 460 lm.

Result: bathroom


How to make an inexpensive but very powerful LED lamp

How to make an inexpensive but very powerful LED lamp

How to make an inexpensive but very powerful LED lamp

For the bathroom, I made a lamp from Cree XM-L T6, which was powered by two chargers for the LG mobile phone. According to the factory specifications, it can produce a current of 0.9 A, but in practice I have established that it is limited to 1 A. Two units are connected in parallel for a total current of 2 A.
Such a lamp will consume 6 watts of energy and provide lighting of 700 lm.

Result: kitchen


How to make an inexpensive but very powerful LED lamp

How to make an inexpensive but very powerful LED lamp

How to make an inexpensive but very powerful LED lamp

How to make an inexpensive but very powerful LED lamp

How to make an inexpensive but very powerful LED lamp

How to make an inexpensive but very powerful LED lamp

How to make an inexpensive but very powerful LED lamp

If in the case of the hallway and the bathroom, the provision of minimal lighting was not too significant, then the story is different with the kitchen. I didn’t want my wife or anyone else to cut his finger while cooking and blame me, or, worse, my beloved LED lamps ...
To ensure good lighting of the kitchen, I decided to use not one, but two Cree XM-L T6 elements, with an energy consumption of 9 W each and a luminous flux of 910 lm. As a heat sink element, I used a cooling radiator from a Pentium III microprocessor, to which I attached two LEDs with hot glue.
Although the Cree XM-L T6 can operate at a maximum current of 3 A, the manufacturer recommends using 2 A for stable operation, at which the LED will emit about 700 lm. Testing of several power supplies showed that the current in them is either not limited, or the limit exceeds the required 2 A. I managed to find a power source that, based on the technical characteristics, gives 12 V at a current of 1.5 A. After checking with resistors, it turned out that the current strength is limited to 1.8 A, which is very close to the desired 2 A. Great!
To insulate the radiator and the two LEDs, I used two neodymium magnets from an inoperative DVD drive and plastic mounts for the motherboard. Everything is fixed with glue and Velcro.
Although I expected that such a lamp would produce a luminous flux of 1300 lm, like the 23 W fluorescent lamp that it replaced, I was pleasantly surprised to find that the light produced by the new lamp was significantly brighter, and the energy consumption was 12 W - almost half as much.

Conclusion


The coolest part of this project is that it can be implemented using objects that, with the exception of LEDs, almost everyone has at hand.
Thus, it is possible to get an LED lamp at a price of half or even four times lower than the cost of an LED lamp in a store.
I hope that now the old chargers for mobile phones will be useful again, and not fall into the trash.
Thanks for your attention!
come back
Comments (20)
  1. the guest
    #1 the guest Guests 22 january 2018 06:39
    11
    On Ali, you can buy LEDs with 220 V power and you do not need this crap with charges
    1. A. Bekjan
      #2 A. Bekjan Guests April 7, 2018 13:08
      3
      This is for those who have burned out and for those who are bored
  2. the guest
    #3 the guest Guests January 22, 2018 1:58 p.m.
    7
    The article is not relevant. Prices have already fallen. In a conventional electrical store, 5-7 W lamps are sold for 50-100 rubles. Everything is working. Does not flicker.
  3. Guest Vladislav
    #4 Guest Vladislav Guests January 22, 2018 19:49
    3
    Now LED lamps cost less than 200r. Do I have to bother?
  4. Guest Valery
    #5 Guest Valery Guests 23 january 2018 00:34
    5
    The author has nothing to do. A 3-5 watt LED lamp costs no more than 100 rubles. And here is one 150 PSU. What's the point?
  5. Victor
    #6 Victor Guests 23 january 2018 10:29
    29
    If you have hands and know how to make, then why not. Anyone who has never made, does not understand why all this!
  6. Pavel Skvortsov
    #7 Pavel Skvortsov Guests 23 january 2018 16:18
    0
    hemorrhoids
  7. Artyom
    #8 Artyom Guests 24 january 2018 09:39
    22
    And I liked the idea. I have power supplies from all kinds of gadgets (devices) a whole box and I still could not figure out where to attach them. Throw away a pity.
  8. Alexander
    #9 Alexander Guests January 25, 2018 1:37 p.m.
    7
    Thanks for the article. This is what I was looking for. Purchased lamps all without cooling, crashed out often cost too much in batches to change tired. decided -I will take up the soldering iron.
  9. bb
    #10 bb Guests January 25, 2018 10:06 p.m.
    3
    Mdaaaa ...
    Author, read how the LEDs work.
    And instead of broken-up charges from phones, you can do with 1 (one) resistor of the corresponding rating and power.
    Ohm's Law, physics textbook 5-6 grade.
    1. popvovka
      #11 popvovka Visitors January 26, 2018 11:23 p.m.
      19
      Did you go to school?
      220 volt power supply, LED current 0.7 amperes.
      You need to pay off 208 volts. 208 / 0.7 = 208 (300) ohms.
      Power resistor 145 watts !!!
      Either an IP or a quenching capacitor!
      1. popvovka
        #12 popvovka Visitors January 27, 2018 09:39
        5
        * 298 ohm more precisely.
  10. VERONICA
    #13 VERONICA Guests February 7, 2018 19:33
    3
    Awesome! And where are such men found?
  11. Vitaliy
    #14 Vitaliy Guests February 9, 2018 01:33
    4
    it would be wiser to use thermal grease rather than hotmelt
  12. Ded Fedor.
    #15 Ded Fedor. Guests February 25, 2018 05:23
    13
    Over the past couple of years, I have had to intensively repair LED lights, including ultraviolet and powerful ones - such as lighting railway tunnels. Perfectly understanding the specifics and protective measures, he very quickly planted his vision, drying, and detachment of the retina. After all, any LED is a microlaser emitting in a narrow range, parts of the eye without responding to this light sector simply burn out. Therefore, the widespread, permanent and direct effect on the eyes is destructive. The use of diffusers expanding the light spectrum, negates the advantages of the LED as a lamp. Be careful. Remember how dust and pesticides were imposed on us at one time, and how it ended.
  13. Andrei.
    #16 Andrei. Guests March 19, 2018 07:15
    10
    Yes. LEDs on Ali cost a penny. In the shops of Khabarovsk, LED lamps 5v -49r.7v -67r. 11v-87r is also not expensive. BUY ..... BUT IT IS GOOD THAT TO MAKE IT OWN YOUR HANDS !!!!!!
  14. Relay switch
    #17 Relay switch Guests April 29, 2018 23:34
    15
    You can immediately see the amateurs in the question of LEDs. 100-150 rubles, and did you see the stuffing? A parametric power supply on a quenching capacitor. It even consumes 10 or more watts without load. In reality, such lamps have low-power LEDs (7-20 pcs) with consumption 1.5-3 watts. A true 5-10 watts LED lamp should have aluminum.cooler and cost from 800 to 1,500 rubles (driver, LEDs, radiator). And the author is a hammer, where you need to grow from. Full respect to such DIYers.
  15. Guest Sergey
    #18 Guest Sergey Guests May 18, 2018 13:51
    3
    Very well. You can use unnecessary "chargers", because the secondary circuit is isolated from the network, and 220 V diodes carry a potential of 310 V, which is dangerous!
  16. Guest Vladimir
    #19 Guest Vladimir Guests January 31, 2019 5:59 p.m.
    0
    It’s a good idea to use old chargers lying around. Only there is one thing - but. Over time, electrolytes swell in any PSU and must be changed. In this case, you have to dismantle the entire device to replace the capacitors))) And this is oh, how reluctant)))))
  17. Elctric
    #20 Elctric Guests June 24, 2019 11:26 p.m.
    0
    I completely agree with the relay. A cheap r ... about from China does not give out the declared parameters. Self-made cars rule, all the better, than plumping in the gateway or lying on the couch and pushing the remote control buttons.

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