Martin v
New Member
Hi everyone,
I have designed and built a boost converter for driving high power LEDs. Schematic attached. Part values are chosen for the supply voltage I'm working with as well as the LEDs I'm driving. In practice the input voltage is 12-24V nominal and it drives 1A LEDs that have a voltage drop around 30V (ie. 30W LEDs). I have released it under a Creative Commons license.
The circuit works a treat and I'm using it for lighting in much of our house.
Recently I heard of problems with EMI produced by sub-standard LED lighting being imported into the country.
EMI is something I hadn't considered when designing the circuit, and while I have taken much care with the PCB layout I haven't put anything in specifically to combat EMI.
I want this circuit to be as useful to as many people as possible and of course want it to perform wonderfully for all. I don't have easy access to sophisticated test equipment - even the price for obtaining the required EMI standard document cannot be justified (it's hundred of $$$).
I guess what I'm asking is if there are some sensible circuit mods I can make to ensure this thing will be nice and quiet?
Also is there some way to measure cheaply (ie. with the tools available to a hobbyist) how the circuit radiates so I can perform before and after tests that would be helpful and appreciated too.
I have designed and built a boost converter for driving high power LEDs. Schematic attached. Part values are chosen for the supply voltage I'm working with as well as the LEDs I'm driving. In practice the input voltage is 12-24V nominal and it drives 1A LEDs that have a voltage drop around 30V (ie. 30W LEDs). I have released it under a Creative Commons license.
The circuit works a treat and I'm using it for lighting in much of our house.
Recently I heard of problems with EMI produced by sub-standard LED lighting being imported into the country.
EMI is something I hadn't considered when designing the circuit, and while I have taken much care with the PCB layout I haven't put anything in specifically to combat EMI.
I want this circuit to be as useful to as many people as possible and of course want it to perform wonderfully for all. I don't have easy access to sophisticated test equipment - even the price for obtaining the required EMI standard document cannot be justified (it's hundred of $$$).
I guess what I'm asking is if there are some sensible circuit mods I can make to ensure this thing will be nice and quiet?
Also is there some way to measure cheaply (ie. with the tools available to a hobbyist) how the circuit radiates so I can perform before and after tests that would be helpful and appreciated too.