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So I found some LED stips on EBay and conjured up some ideas. I am an electrician in the navy. So things like this don't scare me to much. By the way this all started yesterday when I paid 7.50 dollars for a single F8 light bulb. I am going to take some of the following led strips and hook them up in parallel and then mount them in the light fixtures already installed in the coach. ![]() I will take pictures and keep tally of money's spent so that all can duplicate if you desire. I am figuring about 2 bucks per light fixture depending on how well the leds disperse the light. The ones I am purchasing say they have a 120 degree spread. We will see. | ||
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Found these too. ![]() Maybe use them for the turn signals. I think it maybe take away from the Barth feel though. Just looks too technilogically advanced. I will have to ponder this one some more. | |||
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Well I'll be doggonne! ....I thought that the SK in your sign. was for store keeper. #1 29' 1977parted out and still alive in Barths all over the USA | |||
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Either or both configurations 110V ? | |||
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@Dick. No the SK in sk8er is skater when spoken(child hood years I was big into skateboarding still do a few tricks now and then). Nuclear trained (Power generation not bombs)electrician through and through. Come March I am getting commisioned and moving to Idaho Falls, ID. @Mogan. I think these were for 12 VDC applictions. There are a lot of converters on ebay that you just plug into an outlet if you looking for a more portable application. | |||
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Congratulations! BTW Bill_NY is also a former skater. #1 29' 1977parted out and still alive in Barths all over the USA | |||
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Make sure Nick Cagle addresses you as "Sir" (I'm a retired officer, myself.)
The breakers are typically manual reset. It sounds like a loose connection or bad ballast in the light fixture. Remove the fixture and connect an incandescent, and see if the same symptoms occur. Rusty ![]() '94 28' Breakaway: MilSpec AMG 6.5L TD 230HP Nelson and Chester, not-spoiled Golden Retrievers Sometimes I think we're alone in the universe, and sometimes I think we're not. In either case the idea is quite staggering. - Arthur C. Clarke It was a woman who drove me to drink, and I've been searching thirty years to find her and thank her - W. C. Fields | |||
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I agree with Rusty. Start with the fixture itself and look at the starter, bulb connection and the bulbs themselves. I assume you switched bulbs already. An easy check for wires shorted to ground(pinched wire) would be to use an ohmmeter(most likely to have) or a meggar to test the wires resistance to ground. Make sure you are checking with a good ground. Don't just use some random screw on the wall. I like to use outlet grounds or the chassis if I am working outside the coach. I have several fixtures that seem dim and that is another reason I am researching the cheap LEDs. | |||
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Well it has been a while since I have been on. Just got the house packed in loaded(3 days worth). I am not able to follow what you have tried to describe with words. I would say that a simple picture is worth a thousand words. Then I may be able to help better. From the wiring that I have encoutered so far in my Barth I trust nothing. between the old convention of wire colors(atleast not what I am used to) and the DIY electrical additions over the last 25 years it could be anything. When in doubt run new wires as best as you can. If it is a relatively straight shot and you can access both ends of the wire, then snip the two ends and use the old wire as a pull to run the new wire. That would be a solution for a suspected ground on a wire. I will stress again that a picture will help out tramendously. Include the readings you have taken also such as where you have found ground and power sources. Rodney. | |||
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I ran a 16' 12V LED strip underneath my awning, $21.99 on ebay + an extra switch, I also ran an 8' warm white strip around the base of the bed platform, and 2 amber strips under my entry steps, ![]() http://i96.photobucket.com/alb...646.jpg?t=1338505458 | |||
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Nice Mini! I once had a 67 Cooper S many years ago, miss it. | |||
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Yes, that looks like a sweet classic Mini. Would almost fit in the basement of some coaches. There was some large coach that would accommodate a small Mercedes SL in a storage bay. | |||
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So I finally recieved my LED's from China(rather quick actually). These ended up costing 25 dollars for 4 rolls. Each roll was 5 meters long. One roll did 3 light fixtures like the one in the pictures below. They looked like this. ![]() Here are some pics of the lights after they were converted to LEDs. I left as much of the original stuff just incase. ![]() ![]() ![]() Here is a pic of it all lit up. Electrons flowing again makes me happy. ![]() I don't have picture from before the project but you can just imagine a dark spot and that is what it looked like. Over all these lights were really easy to work with. If you don't use the entire roll as a single strip you will have to solder on some leads for the next strip but that is probably the hardest part of working with them. Everything else is easy peasy. | |||
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The supplier I purchased from was hke supplier on eBay. Look for"3528 smd led light strip". The are lots of different options like length waterproof colors etc. I had lots of inspiration looking at all the options. | |||
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