With no qualifier, DC means DC
They'll probably be the ones supplied with DC.
Perhaps my first post should have readIf the "DC" supplied is something approaching true DC!
Kind Regards, John
We have tried rectifying the mains but most 230V LED's include a series capacitor and don't run on DC whereas most [but not all] 12V LED's do.I haven't yet seen a mains voltage LED running on AC that doesn't flicker
most 230V LED's include a series capacitor
The original fittings were bought with CFLs fitted. These have been swapped to LEDs, and work very nicely. Both straight off the mains.Do you know what he is using to power these Lamps, was it ust a straight swap from halogens, there seems to have been a lot of recent posts saying they dont work, but i feel sure theres a lot in use that are fine.
Probably the most confused technical term in existence, given that it means unvarying voltage.With no qualifier, DC means DC
Probably the most confused technical term in existence, given that it means unvarying voltage.
Ok thanks, just clicked in you said GX53, I misread it as GX5.3 12 volt for some reasonThe original fittings were bought with CFLs fitted. These have been swapped to LEDs, and work very nicely. Both straight off the mains.
As Detlef said, I think the terminology is potentially confusing, or even misleading. ...Does it mean unvarying voltage ? or does it mean pnly that a variable current is flowing constantly in the same direction.
Indeed, and there are countless other situations in which current (and maybe also voltage) will have a highly variable nature (of any waveform - sinusoidal, square wave/pulses etc.) but with a superimposed (constant, or essentially constant) DC offset which means that the polarity of the voltage and/or current never 'crosses zero' (i.e. "current always flows in same direction").There are power supplies with outputs rated as "12 V DC eff" which do not have a constant output voltage but instead have an output that averages out to be 12 volts over a very short period.
Why?Although polarity of voltage is always the same and current always flows in the same direction, to describe it as "DC" fails miserably to describe the full situation, yet it cannot, in toto, be described as "AC" if neither voltage nor current ever 'cross zero'
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