Watch out how many xmas lights you put up
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@MattSpeller said:
@brianlittlejohn Nicely found Sir.
Looks like they run them on AC! Which is a bit wackadoo crazy but it seems to work. You could test this by plugging in a strand and spinning it around in the air like a lasso, you should see them pulsing on and off then.
It actually kinda makes sense, What is an AC to DC adapter? In simple terms it is a transformer, diode, and capacitor. The LEDs are diodes (all be it more sensitive).
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@brianlittlejohn yeah I hadn't thought to just string them all together in series to build a kind of... half bridge rectifier? Neat circuit actually.
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@brianlittlejohn Still don't know how it would affect your WIFI though lol
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@MattSpeller said:
@brianlittlejohn Still don't know how it would affect your WIFI though lol
That I don't know either.
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Same way ballists in fluorescent lights do. Magic.
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The LED ones, will likely not as they are DC.
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@hubtechagain said:
Same way ballists in fluorescent lights do. Magic.
Ballasts do because they are big Inductors to control the flow of electricity.
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@brianlittlejohn said:
@hubtechagain said:
Same way ballists in fluorescent lights do. Magic.
Ballasts do because they are big Inductors to control the flow of electricity.
Yup and even then the effect drops with the square of the distance so it's a very localized disturbance.
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@MattSpeller said:
@JaredBusch said:
The LED ones, will likely not as they are DC.
Why would either?
Well, mostly because traditional, non-LED, models use incandescent bulbs. Bulbs, which I thought were noisier EMI wise than other things. But I could always be wrong. I never actually studied it.