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Light on Devo 7e?
- ClittleJ
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- Ssayer
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- ursus69
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Look here:
www.rcgroups.com/forums/showthread.php?2189882-My-Devo-7E-mods
www.deviationtx.com/forum/6-general-disc...-those-leds-are-tiny
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- Chimera
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- ClittleJ
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Cheers!
Edit: The ones I was hoping to use, because I have them on hand, was spare blue ones I have for the Hubsan 107L. Can these be used in this application?
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- Chimera
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www.amazon.com/gp/product/B01CUGAFEC/ref...05_s02?ie=UTF8&psc=1
The description you have is correct, positive to black on the switch, negative to the RF shield if you can get it to stick - I actually just have my ground stuck to the RF shield with electrical tape because I'm replacing the whole module with a 4-in-1 soon.
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- ClittleJ
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- Chimera
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- RoGuE_StreaK
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- yets
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- Chimera
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- yets
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Chimera wrote: No resisters for me, 2 of those SMD LEDs = 6v so no need AFAIK.
Ahh yes, that would make sense lol. Thanks
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- ClittleJ
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What about the people that run 3 of the small LED's?Chimera wrote: No resisters for me, 2 of those SMD LEDs = 6v so no need AFAIK.
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- MikefromGermany
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Simple LED Driver, aka fixed current circuit.ClittleJ wrote: What about the people that run 3 of the small LED's?
Most efficient way.
Or you connect the LEDs in a parallel circuit, current limited by a resistor.
That's quite a quick'n'dirty approach, though.
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- yets
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- ClittleJ
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edit; I am using 4x Nimh 1.2V eneloops. The Tx usually sits around 5-5.5V whenever Im using it, so I wouldn't even have the required 6V you would get from 4 dry cells... very confused now.
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- Chimera
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- Deal57
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I've wired a lot of LEDs and I won't install them without a resistor. http:LED.linear1.org has a great set of guides on LEDs.
Deviation Devo7e 3way switch mod, A7105, NRF24L01
Devo6s 2x2 switch mod, trim mod, haptic, multimodule, A7105, NRF24L01, CC2500
Devo12e 4-in-1 with voice mod -- it speaks!!
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- ClittleJ
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Got a couple tips for the method I used, which worked pretty well.
Make the wire joining the 2 LED's the exact length so they sit right about in the square little slots in the channel on the buzzer piece that you remove with 2 screws. (looks like they were probably made for LED's..) the wire joining them will fold over the clear insert perfectly.
Snip a small triangular piece out of each edge of the plastic channel on the transmitter with snips (or grind it down a bit) to let the positive and negative wire have room on each side.
I used a little piece of rolled up "sticky tack" (the sticky clay stuff for hanging things on the wall) on each side and jammed it into the edges of the channel on the buzzer piece (where the LED's will be installed) to give the LED's something to sit on/stick too. Also when I put everything back together it kind of pressed the sticky tack to the perfect shape it needed to hold the LED's in place.
Anyway.. that's how I got it to work. There are probably much more efficient/easier ways to go about it but, it is what it is, and it works great for the time being!
Hope this helps someone, and thanks to everyone who helped me!
Cheers!
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- ClittleJ
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Deal57 wrote: I'm using three 3mm LEDs in series from a 5v source on the processor board, and a 68 ohm resistor to ground. It's been working great for a couple years now.
I've wired a lot of LEDs and I won't install them without a resistor. http:LED.linear1.org has a great set of guides on LEDs.
Uhhggg.. you think it's dangerous with this setup?
Would the LED's burn out or it could mess something else up?
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