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LEDS FROM NGINEERING.COM!!!
- liltoot
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- David K. Smith
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Here's what you can do in Z scale with a white 0402 SMD LED:
Here's the construction article:
jamesriverbranch.net/detail_8.htm
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- HoboTim
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I got my start with nano LEDs from Ngineering about 5 years ago. When you start doing internet searches, you will start to find cheaper sources. But as far as the super mini electronic circuits, Ngineering is breaking awesome ground!!
If it's 0402 nano LEDs you want, try
www.kingbrightusa.com
Hobo Tim
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- TerryH
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- liltoot
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so i reordered by phone this time,, asking for the 2.5mm by 1 mm sized leds. i bought 100 of each color they had,, it was less then 70 buks us, and worth every penny!! very easy to add wire to, i ve now got cars, trucks, individual buildings rooms and my personal favorite,, my cabooses fully lighted up!!! kingbrite the place to go,, but like i say,, know what your looking for,, or you ll end up with 50 buks of leds you need a electron microscope to wire up!!! canada mike:side:
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- David K. Smith
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your absolutely right on the KINGBRITE.COM they have the cheapest nano leds i ve found yet!! still a bit green on these, i ordered the smallest they had,,BIG MISTAKE!!!! they showed up at .49 by.76! i had to buy a kids microscope just to pull one out of it protective plastic!! never thought they ve gotten this small, i took some non coated 40 guage wire and tried to solder one together,,,no way. even with a 1/8th tip, there was no way to get the solder on before the led was cooked, hahaha,, soo crazy!!
so i reordered by phone this time,, asking for the 2.5mm by 1 mm sized leds. i bought 100 of each color they had,, it was less then 70 buks us, and worth every penny!! very easy to add wire to, i ve now got cars, trucks, individual buildings rooms and my personal favorite,, my cabooses fully lighted up!!! kingbrite the place to go,, but like i say,, know what your looking for,, or you ll end up with 50 buks of leds you need a electron microscope to wire up!!! canada mike:side:
Contact me offline if you want to get rid of the 0402s you got by mistake.
david at davidksmith dot com
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- Espeeman
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i was so taken, i had to melt a credit card at their booth. canada mike
LOL! Classic line!
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- TIMX
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- TIMX
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www.noleltylights.com
Tim
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- Havoc
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- David K. Smith
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Nice to know there are 0402 leds. For Z this is going to be usable as 0603 is too lage for some things. I consider 0402 the limit for hand soldering. I once misordered capacitors and received 0201 size... And smaller is already coming.
I read a report from a fellow working on simulated 3D displays who hand-soldered almost a thousand 0201 SMD LEDs on a custom board. I don't disbelieve him, but from my own experience 0402s are enough of a challenge, having just finished a T scale (1:450) working crossing flasher that has four 0402s.
1-450.blogspot.com/2009/06/on-roll.html
I'm game to try 0201s, but I haven't found an online source for them yet.
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- Socalz44
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- Mr.JA
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... having just finished a T scale (1:450) working crossing flasher that has four 0402s.
Truly AMAZING, Mr. Smith!
So... How many hours did this consume?
More importantly... How many curse words were involved?
Alex
Tokyo, Japan
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- David K. Smith
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David K. Smith wrote:
... having just finished a T scale (1:450) working crossing flasher that has four 0402s.
Truly AMAZING, Mr. Smith!
So... How many hours did this consume?
More importantly... How many curse words were involved?
Alex
Tokyo, Japan
Hours: I didn't keep track, but I'd estimate about 20.
Language: Moderate. Could have been worse.
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- liltoot
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- David K. Smith
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why not incorporate both led and resister into one unit
One reason not to incorporate resistors into LEDs is that a resistor then restricts the LED to a single (or small range) of supply voltage. It would probably make them more expensive--probably more than the cost of separate components. There is also a problem of heat dissapation-both LED and resistor would generate heat, and together in a tiny package it might become an issue. There are a few LEDs made with built-in resistors, but these are large T1 type, made mostly for panel displays, and designed for standard 5 VDC supplies used by many IC circuits.
I've stopped using resistors altogether, and instead I use type CL2M 20ma current regulators. These are very small ICs that accept anything from 5 to 90 VDC, but safely power any standard LED (90% of LEDs use 20ma of current). The chips will drive from 1 to 4 LEDs, and they also solve the age-old problem of color brightness balancing (different color LEDs operate at different voltages, requiring different resistor values using the same supply). All LEDs are the same brightness with a constant current supply.
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- SJ-BAZ-man
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I was suprised when I ordered some those mass retailer 1/220 cars on ebay that LED's in them. Front whites and rear reds. What the heck. So I opened them up and they had soldered 4 in series which means wire cuts and chip solder everywhere. Totally nuts. Glad to see yours looks better !!!
I think the 0201's are likely die only with mimimal encapuslation. Desinged for OEM stuff.
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