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Easy high-power LED blinking circuit

Often times when people get started in electronics, they want to blink LEDs. This is this a great idea, and we really like
blinking LEDs, so we're happy to help. In the last year or two there's also a growing chorus of people that want to drive
high powered LEDs. That's not always as easy, but it can be done.

Now by the time that you start talking about blinking the high power LEDs-- you shouldn't be surprised if people start
whipping out the heavy artillery: 555 timer chips, transistors, boost converters, microcontrollers, solid state relays,
and/or dedicated LED driver chips. While each of those does have its place, sometimes it's nice to have a simpler and
much less expensive alternative.

Here we describe what is possibly the simplest and cheapest circuit for driving and blinking high-power LEDs. The
secret ingredient? Our good old friend the blinking incandescent light bulb.
Here's the "big" idea: put the LED that you want to drive in series with a blinking light bulb. Simple? Check. Cheap?
Check.

A blinking light bulb has a bimetallic strip inside that, when it gets hot enough, disconnects the circuit until it cools down.
When the circuit first turns on, the light bulb and LED turn on. As the light bulb warms up, the strip bends, turning off
both the bulb and LED. When the strip cools enough for the strip to snap back, the process repeats and the LED blinks.
The basic circuit is scalable, if you use a high-enough power LED and light bulb-- blinking bulbs like this are available in
a variety of different sizes.

For our implementation and demonstration, we have a whopper of an LED: it's a 5 W class Luxeon K2, in "royal
blue" (455 nm), type LXK2-PR14-R00, with a typical radiometric power of 575mW @ 1A, and rated up to 1.5 A.
These currently cost about $5 each in small quantities.

Our blinking bulb is a spare from a set of christmas lights. Estimated cost: $0.15. It's designed to run with about 3V
and 100-200 mA, so that sets the scale for how hard we'll be able to drive an LED with this particular bulb. This is a
fine way to run a 1W scale LED (or a bigger LED at up to 1 W), but if we really wanted to drive that K2 up to its full
brightness we'd need (1) a very large heat sink for the LED and (2) a bigger blinking light bulb, maybe one of the 7W
candelabra types.

For our voltage source we went tiny and used four AAA batteries, for a 6 V pack. This gives a output current in the
range of between 150 and 250 mA, depending on battery freshness and bulb resistance (which is not a constant).
Typical AAA alkaline batteries typically have a capacity near 1100 mAh, so at 200 mA and 50% duty cycle, one
might expect my little battery pack to blink pleasantly for about 10 hours. Be sure to consult with Ohm to make sure
that you don't walk into any traps, and keep a multimeter handy to measure the actual currents and voltages that
you're working with.

To try it out, we built up the circuit on a piece of perfboard. I soldered the back side of the LED to a 10 mil copper
strip to act as a heat sink. The light bulb was not very interested in being soldered but eventually complied. After
soldering all two components, it's ready to try out. So how does it work? Pretty well, actually.

But this is crazy inefficient!


Well, yes and no. The light bulb, when it's on, basically acts as a low-ohm high-power resistor-- it's no
worse than any other low-ohm high-power resistor in a LED driver circuit to limit the current. Like
other incandescent light bulbs, it's an efficient resistor that happens to give off a tiny fraction of its
energy as visible light. That said, no this isn't exactly a high-performance circuit. Most folks working
with high-powered LEDs would prefer to use constant-current "switching" drive circuits that operate
near 85-90% efficiency, rather than the 60% that we achieve here by driving a 3.6 V LED with a 6 V
source and a load resistor in between. However, this circuit *is* easy to construct from common
materials, very inexpensive, scalable, and easy to understand. And it blinks.

But this is crazy anachronistic!


Well... can't argue with that.

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