No problem - but, as I said, it sounds as if you have just got "a dimmer that buzzes". You can try changing to different LEDs, but I rather doubt that will change anything.
Kind Regards, John
So is it normal for a dimmer to buzz a little?
No problem - but, as I said, it sounds as if you have just got "a dimmer that buzzes". You can try changing to different LEDs, but I rather doubt that will change anything.
Kind Regards, John
As I said, it is quite common, particularly when the dimmer is 'turned right down'. Does your dimmer still buzz (as much, or at all) when you turn it up to full brightness.So is it normal for a dimmer to buzz a little?
As I said, it is quite common, particularly when the dimmer is 'turned right down'. Does your dimmer still buzz (as much, or at all) when you turn it up to full brightness.
Kind Regards, John
I can't disagree with that but, at least in my experience, many of them do, particularly at high levels of dimming (very dim light).Poor form though. Unless you're doing something like overloading the dimmer, a good quality unit shouldn't humm.
As I said, it is quite common, particularly when the dimmer is 'turned right down'. Does your dimmer still buzz (as much, or at all) when you turn it up to full brightness.
Kind Regards, John
Yes, it's worth a go - they certainly seem to vary in this respect.Dimmer is humming at all levels of dim, increases a little when the dim is higher, might return this one and try another one.
As for LEDs, especially low voltage ones, you're just asking for trouble of some sort and if it is only buzzing you can think yourself quite lucky.
As for LEDs, especially low voltage ones, you're just asking for trouble of some sort
For a LED driver designed to work with a 12 volt DC input the pulsing energy from an electronic transformer will cause the driver to operate in an unstable mode and thus the driver is un-able to properly control the current it feeds to the LED element.
It can't control the current feed, what does that mean?
If it weren't for the power consumption issue, it would be nice to turn the clocks back a few decades - lighting used to be so straightforwardYes, the biggest trouble is with 12V LEDs. Unless you get the compatibility between dimmer, driver, and lamp exactly right then it may flicker, not dim smoothly, not dim at all, or not even light.
If it weren't for the power consumption issue, it would be nice to turn the clocks back a few decades - lighting used to be so straightforward
Kind Regards, John
You jest to some extent, but .... !!I've often imagined how dumb we're going to feel when tidal or fusion or something else makes electricity so cheap and green that we'll be glad to heat our homes with lots of 100W filaments in glass globes, far more eco-friendly than those gas-guzzling boilers
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