I've asked two bloody questions now, only I actually need an answer to this one. I've posted this question on four forums and I've had two versions of "Are those resistors next to your LED", I've also had "The blue LEDs don't seem to fade, check these links for a circuit simulator". Before anyone suggests that's a good idea, I bet the sim won't take into account that the fading function is from a mod chip connected to the LED's ground point. I bet it will assume that cos the circuit appears to be on all the time, the inverter won't have chance to get a low to fade the other LED's in. WHY CAN'T ANYBODY ANSWER THE FECKING QUESTION I ASKED???? It really isn't that difficult. Its a simple inverter circuit but I'm new to this and theory and what I've read tells me that it should work. Now I want to ask experience just in case I'm wrong and wreck my xbox or parts.
Despite your attitude, I'll make a few comments:
Assuming the "LED controller" is providing a connection to circuit ground:
S1 will turn the left side LEDs on and off.
S2 is shorted, so will do nothing.
The LEDs on the right will always be on.
S3 will do nothing.
If the controller is off, then all LEDs will be off.
Look at this and see if you think it will do what you want.
Flickr says the photo was removed. Maybe I was too stupid to find it.I've asked two bloody questions now, only I actually need an answer to this one. I've posted this question on four forums and I've had two versions of "Are those resistors next to your LED", I've also had "The blue LEDs don't seem to fade, check these links for a circuit simulator". Before anyone suggests that's a good idea, I bet the sim won't take into account that the fading function is from a mod chip connected to the LED's ground point. I bet it will assume that cos the circuit appears to be on all the time, the inverter won't have chance to get a low to fade the other LED's in. WHY CAN'T ANYBODY ANSWER THE FECKING QUESTION I ASKED???? It really isn't that difficult. Its a simple inverter circuit but I'm new to this and theory and what I've read tells me that it should work. Now I want to ask experience just in case I'm wrong and wreck my xbox or parts.
I was debating that. See my last post.You're too nice, he doesn't deserve it.
I've asked two bloody questions now, only I actually need an answer to this one. I've posted this question on four forums and I've had two versions of "Are those resistors next to your LED", I've also had "The blue LEDs don't seem to fade, check these links for a circuit simulator". Before anyone suggests that's a good idea, I bet the sim won't take into account that the fading function is from a mod chip connected to the LED's ground point. I bet it will assume that cos the circuit appears to be on all the time, the inverter won't have chance to get a low to fade the other LED's in. WHY CAN'T ANYBODY ANSWER THE FECKING QUESTION I ASKED???? It really isn't that difficult. Its a simple inverter circuit but I'm new to this and theory and what I've read tells me that it should work. Now I want to ask experience just in case I'm wrong and wreck my xbox or parts.
I was debating that. See my last post.
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