Hey all I'm wondering if anyone here can give me a hand with an electrical problem that plagues myself and a lot of LED growers, (I must admit I didn't read the thread but I bet no one has asked this question). Seems that some LED panels will remain partially lit during lights off, which we all agree is probably not too good for the flowers or the panels
. What we can't seem to agree on is why this occurs. Some say it's the room's wiring. That old outdated wiring causes this. And for the record I have very old 2 wire ungrounded outlets. Some say it's digital timers that cause this and using analog timers will fix this, though I've had it happen on both kinds. Some say that the panel itself is grounded improperly, which I believe too. In my situation the only way to fix it is to connect the ground to a small nut and bolt that is connected to one of the PC cooling fans that many LED manufacturers use. The problem with that solution is if I touch the panel during lights off the diodes will faintly glow, and yes the nut and bolt connection is isolated from the case. I've tried to connect it to different parts of the panel's metal casing but it doesn't work all the time. Or could it be the drivers/transformers that LEDs use? That cheap ass drivers are continuously sipping power?
So to all you electricians out there, before I or anyone give themselves a case of cardiac arrythmia
View attachment 2467449, what the hell is causing this behavior in some panels? I don't think the DIY light makers suffer from this, (or they're not saying perhaps
), but lots of LED growers, usually with Chinese made panels, have this problem. So anyone out there have an idea to what's really going on? Is there one common thread to this problem? Or is it several? Thanks RIU.