Stable Light with Star
di JD_Printing
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I replaced the burned out bulb in our stable with an LED version. Of course I couldn't just do a flood light I had to add the star to the front.
Our stable is a unique shape make with 'sticks'. So this might not be suitable to your stable's roof angles.
The light is a repurposed blown out 12 Volt LED light which put out the light of about a 40W bulb. In this light the inverter which runs on 12V is bad. The LEDs I found just start to turn on at around 12 - 14 volts. This dim voltage was perfect for the soft glow needed. I put one white LED behind the star (sanded down the edges to give a soft glow instead of bright light). The star LED is wired in series to the 'flood' light. I run the lights off an old 19 Volt Wall Wart power supply which is connected to a buck-buck regulator set to the desired brightness level.
The first led I tried to use came from some Harbor Freight 'free' flashlights. They looked great but burned out quickly due to heat. The new version is not even g
Our stable is a unique shape make with 'sticks'. So this might not be suitable to your stable's roof angles.
The light is a repurposed blown out 12 Volt LED light which put out the light of about a 40W bulb. In this light the inverter which runs on 12V is bad. The LEDs I found just start to turn on at around 12 - 14 volts. This dim voltage was perfect for the soft glow needed. I put one white LED behind the star (sanded down the edges to give a soft glow instead of bright light). The star LED is wired in series to the 'flood' light. I run the lights off an old 19 Volt Wall Wart power supply which is connected to a buck-buck regulator set to the desired brightness level.
The first led I tried to use came from some Harbor Freight 'free' flashlights. They looked great but burned out quickly due to heat. The new version is not even g
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