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LED strips for observatory lighting :)
- albertw
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11 years 10 months ago - 11 years 10 months ago #96370
by albertw
Albert White MSc FRAS
Chairperson, International Dark Sky Association - Irish Section
www.darksky.ie/
LED strips for observatory lighting :) was created by albertw
The latest improvement in the observatory is lighting. I needed something that was low power, needed to be red, needed to be white, preferably dimmable, preferably remote control. There didn't seem to be anything in the local shops, but I found an LED solution on ebay costing a whole $18.90. At that price I'd have to give it a go!
Here is the ebay image of what you get:
There is a 12v controller (there are versions with mains supplies), a 5M reel of LED's arranged as Red Green Blue Red Green etc., and an IR remote control. There are 60 LEDs per meter, and they are type 3528 which are the dimmest I could find on ebay. This set are waterproof and the tape is backed with some double sided tape.
These LEDs are a bit to bright to look at directly, plus you see the colours rather than white light when you look directly so I cut a piece of angled plastic into the wall and used the double sided tape on the LEDs to stick them to the top of it. That was the light shines down, but none of it directly into my eyes. Using the remote control I can change the brightness, colour, and even activate strobing and fading light sequences (no there is no possible astronomical use for those other settings! see the end of the video below anyway!). And it's all powered from the same bench power supply that runs the scope and dew heater.
Heres a quick video showing how it looks:
It works very well. Reading and writing notes is fine with the while light, and also the red at high brightness.
The only downside is that even on the low setting the 100 red LEDs are still a bit bright for ideal dark adaption. My red astronomy LED torch has 2 red LEDs on a dimmer for example. That's not such a big issue for me - the light pollution and direct streetlights mean that I don't ever really get dark adapted anyway. I can also turn them on and off via the remote, and use my trusty old red astronomy light
www.cademuir.eu/blog/2013/01/13/observatory-lighting/
Here is the ebay image of what you get:
There is a 12v controller (there are versions with mains supplies), a 5M reel of LED's arranged as Red Green Blue Red Green etc., and an IR remote control. There are 60 LEDs per meter, and they are type 3528 which are the dimmest I could find on ebay. This set are waterproof and the tape is backed with some double sided tape.
These LEDs are a bit to bright to look at directly, plus you see the colours rather than white light when you look directly so I cut a piece of angled plastic into the wall and used the double sided tape on the LEDs to stick them to the top of it. That was the light shines down, but none of it directly into my eyes. Using the remote control I can change the brightness, colour, and even activate strobing and fading light sequences (no there is no possible astronomical use for those other settings! see the end of the video below anyway!). And it's all powered from the same bench power supply that runs the scope and dew heater.
Heres a quick video showing how it looks:
It works very well. Reading and writing notes is fine with the while light, and also the red at high brightness.
The only downside is that even on the low setting the 100 red LEDs are still a bit bright for ideal dark adaption. My red astronomy LED torch has 2 red LEDs on a dimmer for example. That's not such a big issue for me - the light pollution and direct streetlights mean that I don't ever really get dark adapted anyway. I can also turn them on and off via the remote, and use my trusty old red astronomy light
www.cademuir.eu/blog/2013/01/13/observatory-lighting/
Albert White MSc FRAS
Chairperson, International Dark Sky Association - Irish Section
www.darksky.ie/
Last edit: 11 years 10 months ago by albertw.
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- dave_lillis
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- Super Giant
11 years 10 months ago #96397
by dave_lillis
Dave L. on facebook , See my images in flickr
Chairman. Shannonside Astronomy Club (Limerick)
Carrying around my 20" obsession is going to kill me,
but what a way to go.
+ 12"LX200, MK67, Meade2045, 4"refractor
Replied by dave_lillis on topic Re: LED strips for observatory lighting :)
yea, A shop here was selling these over the Christmas, crossed my mind they might be useful in an observatory setup,
hard to beat that ebay price though
hard to beat that ebay price though
Dave L. on facebook , See my images in flickr
Chairman. Shannonside Astronomy Club (Limerick)
Carrying around my 20" obsession is going to kill me,
but what a way to go.
+ 12"LX200, MK67, Meade2045, 4"refractor
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- martinus
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11 years 10 months ago #96399
by martinus
Replied by martinus on topic Re: LED strips for observatory lighting :)
Nice idea!
I wonder how involved creating a PWM controller with the capability to further dim the LED's would be? It's fairly simple to use the PWM pins on an arduino and a simple driver circuit to dim small numbers of LEDs but I'm not sure if these strips need any additional driving circuitry.
I wonder how involved creating a PWM controller with the capability to further dim the LED's would be? It's fairly simple to use the PWM pins on an arduino and a simple driver circuit to dim small numbers of LEDs but I'm not sure if these strips need any additional driving circuitry.
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