
Originally Posted by
cdad
Do you have the power comsumption rating for the lights? Also I think your mixing up your terms of series and parallel.
Series would be positive to neg to positive to neg with the power wires hooked at each end and the two middle ones enjoined. (9 volt)
Parallel would be neg to neg and pos to pos with the power wires going to the respected polarity. (4.5 volt)
Depending how bad of a spike your getting you might be able to use a simple capacitor inline to buffer any spikes. If the spikes are bad then it may require what is called a hash filter to stop the actual spike.
Cdad,
Thanks for the reply.
Yes, I did reverse "series" and "parallel" in my question (but not in my tests).
It would seem logical that the best way to wire them would be parallel, but as I stated, I am getting the same problem wired either way.
As luck would have it I did find this info about the strips:
- When the LEDs are on, the unit consumes between 160mA (when powered by three fresh alkaline AA cells) and 110mA (when powered by three Sanyo eneloop Rechargeable Batteries)
- In standby (AUTO) mode: the unit consumes between 2.2mA (alkaline cells) and 1.7mA (NiMH cells)
How would I determine the capacitor rating I need to put inline and where in the circuit would I place it? (Coming from the transfomer, between the two strips or the negative return?)
I doubt the spikes are very big, just enough to trigger the other light.
Thanks