these gaps are on a strip that i made for another project and have not installed yet. Underbody kit has no gaps. you may use any number of LEDs on the underbody kit. i used a strip which has placement to 33 LEDs on it. my friend used one that had 63 or 66 LEDs placements on it. more LEDs means brighter lights. on one side of the car i used 2 strips so that makes 66 LEDs on one side in all. i used a sandpaper to file em. just flatten the rounded tip of the led as much as u can and it wont form spots. if u have small leds than they wont need sanding. i couldnt find small ones in green. usually they are available in white only. by small i mean the kind used in most LED emergency lights these days.
it means i need about 200 led's for my charade....thanks for the info bahi
a little idea for u madhouse bahi...just ues 1K ohms resistor with one led and connect it directly with the woofer +ive to +ive and -ive to -ive and u wil get the results as u want i.e led's will flash with the beets...
nice work thanks for sharing the procedure
no bro. i dont want to draw any current from the woofer. that beast should get as much power as possible. and i was not planning to convert my car cabin into a disco. just the outside
as i know led only works on 2.5 MILI amperes so it would not disturb the power...bt as u say "and i was not planning to convert my car cabin into a disco." so this is useless for u...
@madhouse12
bro ban jei gi...lights aap ki..meet me saturday at f-11 markaz...ur contact me.03455907868
by da wy awsome ride...thumbs up
@sharo532.5 mili amps and around 3.3 volts...
@adeelshahthanks bro. u have a nice ride as well.
nicely done (Y)
some people have been asking about how to connect the LEDs. LEDs are current directional meaning that you have to connect positive of LED to positive of the battery. also to hook up three LEDs and a resistor in series, you have to connect the positive of led #1 to the negative of LED#2, then the positive of the LED#2 to the negative of LED#3
+12V <table class="schematic" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0"><tbody><tr><td></td><td></td><td></td><td></td><td></td><td></td><td class="rvalue">R = 200 ohms</td></tr></tbody></table>the various wiring diagrams online will give u a resistor value of 120 ohms. it is my personal experience that 200-220 ohms is better suited for the long life of LEDs.
nice effects!
good yar..
resistance can be added on positive side as well. i have personaly made that circuit..
yes there is no restriction on whether you put the resistance on positive side or negative. that was just for reference.
nice workpictures are really nice as well, which camera hav u used??