The question is, using a 12V power supply like this... if my LED driver won't be any good. How do I drive it? Any links to something to buy that would fit the bill would be awesome.
It is not clear if those LEDs are common anode or common cathode. Likewise it is not clear if that last driver is a constant current sink or constant current source.
To be clear you need a constant current sink with a common anode LED
Or
A constant current source with a common cathode LED.
The first combination is more common.
You need three constant current drivers per LED, there is no way to put these LEDs in series.
Probably not the answer you were looking for but those links do not describe what they are selling very well. You could always try and ask the seller the question.
It is not clear if those LEDs are common anode or common cathode.
Look at the picture of the LEDs... you see R+, G+, B+, and - on the PCB. I would guess at common cathode from that.
The drives are based around the AMC7135. The data sheet quotes:
350mA constant sink current.
and there are three on each "chip" (as dealextreme call it). Even so, DE quote
4W 1050mA (+/- 10%) Regulated Power Output
So I don't know what they're on about there... (yes, that is 3 chips worth of sink - but power output?! The chip sinks!)
One of the comments on the deal extreme site was:
The screen is wrong, + and - symbols are interchanged. This LED is common anode. Simply change your transistors from NPN to PNP.
Each color draws a different current, so you cannot use a common resistor.
One of the comments on the deal extreme site was:
The screen is wrong, + and - symbols are interchanged. This LED is common anode. Simply change your transistors from NPN to PNP.
One of the comments on the deal extreme site was:
The screen is wrong, + and - symbols are interchanged. This LED is common anode. Simply change your transistors from NPN to PNP.
One more reason cheap isn't always good...
That was on the LED :P.. if I've already bought them and want to use them though...
So definitively find out what way round they are.
Take a 470R resistor (or somewhere between 220R and 1K), connect the common end to +5V and the resistor to ground and touch the R, G and B LEDs in turn. If they light up they are common anode.
If the don't connect the common end to ground and the resistor to +5V if it lights up it is common cathode.
The you can begin to look for the correct type of current driver.