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Nav Lights using Luxeon LEDs
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March 4th 06, 06:16 PM posted to rec.aviation.homebuilt
Andrew Sarangan
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Nav Lights using Luxeon LEDs
Hello
It was my impression that mounting the LED directly to the reflector
(flashing aluminum) will not provide enough heat sinking. A large
surface area is not the only determining factor because the thermal
conductivity of the metal will limit how far the heat can spread. The
thinner the metal, the worse the thermal conductivity. Flashing
aluminum is only 1/100" thick so its conductivity is not very high. One
could construct fins on the back side to increase the surface area, but
commercial heat sinks do that much better.
wrote:
Great write up, and well documented and good composite stuff along with
the electronics.
I'll throw in my 2 cents, on top of an already good design.
1) Sometimes less is more, especially in aircraft. If one LED hits
your numbers, go that way. With a single LED, it increases the
benefits if a switching arrangement versus the linear one deployed.
The hockey pucks mentioned elsewhere might be an easy way to go. As
far as extra margin for degradation over time, this is really an issue
for applications that run 24/7, but for an aircraft and then only the
hours its used at night, these babies aren't going to see over 1000
hours in their life.
2) I hate fans/Heat sinking- airplanes and heat sinks are made out of
the same stuff. Use your reflector as the heat sink by epoxying the
LED to the reflector.
So if you went that way you'd have an off the shelf circuit, one LED on
each side, and no fans.
Andrew Sarangan
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