Now I am a bit stuck.


Moderators: Doone, westonwarrior
agreedDarkstar wrote:Nornally the longer tail of the led is positive,
Mystery is the polarity of the contacts on the PCB and worried that if I get it wrong the LED fries itself. I'll ask tinterweb.**Cant remember but think it will only light when wire correctly + to positive supply
Depends, some LEDS can withstand that sort of reverse voltage, others won't. Check the tech spec for the one you have found, or buy a spare one or just get multimeter for about a fiver which will allow you to test loads of other things in future.cmm303 wrote:... if I get it wrong the LED fries itself.
on order from maplin. Spec seems typical with max reverse = 5v, could not find anything higher. Have multimeter but was not overly happy about powering the unit up whilst in bits then prodding around with probes. Say it ... I'm a big wooz! In the absence of the answer on a plate, I plan to cannibalise the dead bulb holder, solder a couple of fly leads which I can use to measure voltage with unit semi reassembled and live. Then spot the holder and PCB, mount the LED. Simples. It avoids soldering directly to the PCB track, which feels like a good thing. Depending how easy it turns out, i might spot positive on the other two bulb tracks and whack LEDs in all of them.Simon Jones wrote: Depends, some LEDS can withstand that sort of reverse voltage, others won't. Check the tech spec for the one you have found, or buy a spare one or just get multimeter for about a fiver which will allow you to test loads of other things in future.