But still sleeping on the sofa - the bedroom has a dismantled motorbike in it.SingleEither you're single or sleeping on the sofa!!![]()
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So I've replaced all the ceiling spotlights with little LED units too, but one of them was flickering - I swapped bulbs between 2 units, but the flicker remained, so I assume the power supply is dodgy.
I've tried searching for these on Screwfix etc, but mustn't be using the correct search term, as nothing comes up... help please?
Single![]()
Not always, the older ones sometimes just the inner diffuser needs taking out to replace the lamp usually a G4 capsule lamp.
I do recall some have small screws behind that diffuser that hold the whole thing in but do you need to remove the whole thing
Some though are like these and will push in and pull out the housing
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Don't panic. That is not a traditional (wire-wound) 'simple transformer'. It is an 'electronic transformer' - aka (in this case) a 'constant voltage power supply/driver'.Hhmmm. Now I've examined the existing units, and they appear to be simple transformers - something like ... Please don't tell me I need to change all ten of them for these "constant voltage drivers" because I'm using LEDs now instead of halogens![]()
Don't panic. That is not a traditional (wire-wound) 'simple transformer'. It is an 'electronic transformer' - aka (in this case) a 'constant voltage power supply/driver'.
Kind Regards, John
Probably not suitable for some LEDs.It is a SMPS for halogen lights with an AC output of tens of kHz. Not suitable for LEDs.
He might do. However, if I were him I would certainly be inclined to first see what happens if the existing power supplies is used to supply one or two LEDs - with the caveat that if they are cheap LED 'lamps' with just a current-limiting capacitor and a rectifier, the experiment might kill them.This is what he needs: ...
However, if I were him I would certainly try using the existing power supplies first
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