Snoop, if you're going to IKEA directly you'll see the dioder demo displays in a small area with the sealed packages below. Just make sure you grab the proper one you want, I can't recall the last time I actually saw a living employee in that section of the store.
Yeah I'm going in person. It's a decent drive too, so I'll be sure and pay attention then. Thanks for the help.
Anytime. It's a good hour + drive for me as well, the thought of purchasing the wrong product and having to return it is vomit inducing. Might not be a bad idea to call ahead and check stock availability.
electrifying the Detolf itself (highly recommended), then just chain up the LED strips IN SERIES or run a pair of wires to carry power down one rail and connect each strip of LED to that (which is a parallel connection).
Sorry, I meant making the wire connections.
When you said "in series" are you refering to use one led strip to power the next strip? Hence creating sort of a zig-zag wiring on the detolf?
Also of NOTE: When I used SERIES and PARALLEL terms above, this is in reference only to the wiring and segment placement, this is not describing the circuit which includes the printed LED ribbon strip. So when you go research SERIES and PARALLEL electrical connections on your own, this is not what I'm referring to. Wiring LED ribbon pieces in series does not mean you have a series-based circuit.
This is because the LED ribbon is a printed circuit board and the LEDs on it are already wired in a parallel configuration for every 3 units. So it's actually impossible to make a proper electrical series circuit (one where the voltage is divided evenly by the load). Example: placing 4 bare LEDs in series (positive wired to negative, and so on) with a 12v power source gives each LED 3v. Placing 4 in parallel (all the positives wired together and all the negatives together) gives each LED 12v.
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