Planet Tomato
Member
Hello.
I have been researching this for weeks now without making any progress, in another thread I was advised that I can drive a number of EBgen2 LED strips connected in parallel with a MeanWell HLG driver which features both Constant Current(CC) and Constant Voltage(CV), it isn't that I don't trust the correctness of what I was told but I want to know if I should go to the trouble of adding a series fuse with each parallel LED strip, also I would very much like some explanation for why the problems that exists in driving parallel LED's with a Constant Current driver isn't a problem for a CC,CV driver.
I have searched and searched and searched online for information about this but I only find articles such as "What is the difference between CC drivers and CV drivers?" and I can't find anything about drivers that are both CC and CV.
Lets say that I have 12 EBgen2 560mm strips in parallel driven by a HLG-320-24B, the individual strips will still present slightly different voltages right? which would result in the current not being shared equally, right?
Then why isn't thermal runaway relevant?
Cheers.
I have been researching this for weeks now without making any progress, in another thread I was advised that I can drive a number of EBgen2 LED strips connected in parallel with a MeanWell HLG driver which features both Constant Current(CC) and Constant Voltage(CV), it isn't that I don't trust the correctness of what I was told but I want to know if I should go to the trouble of adding a series fuse with each parallel LED strip, also I would very much like some explanation for why the problems that exists in driving parallel LED's with a Constant Current driver isn't a problem for a CC,CV driver.
I have searched and searched and searched online for information about this but I only find articles such as "What is the difference between CC drivers and CV drivers?" and I can't find anything about drivers that are both CC and CV.
Lets say that I have 12 EBgen2 560mm strips in parallel driven by a HLG-320-24B, the individual strips will still present slightly different voltages right? which would result in the current not being shared equally, right?
Then why isn't thermal runaway relevant?
Cheers.