Godney Posted July 1, 2017 Share Posted July 1, 2017 (edited) I need all of your ladies and Gentlemens advice, i know in the past we have all used snubbers, but my problem is a bit different. I am in the process of building a Halloween display and i have noticed my 100 watt led flood lights are staying on just partially between sequences if i use halogen no problem,my question is this can the snubbers handle this kind of power.I was planing on using as seen in previous post a 47k 1 watt resistor. Thanks Rodney Edited July 1, 2017 by Godney Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TitusCarnathan Posted July 1, 2017 Share Posted July 1, 2017 Just use a c7 or c9 incan light bulb as your snubber. I've had to use them for rare cases in the past as well for strobes. I had a string of c9 xenon strobes that were getting fed a small amount of power and every minute 1 strobe would flash that actually killed a few strobes in the process. TRIAC was fine and no issues on any resistive load, so I put a snubber inline with those strobes and it fixed it right up. Since it is a Led bulb I say give a snubber a try. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
plasmadrive Posted July 1, 2017 Share Posted July 1, 2017 If you are using floods that take a DC voltage input and not an AC voltage, then I would say "snubbers" as some call them, would not be your answer. If you are in fact using 120vac input floods, give them a shot. If you are using RGB floods that require a data signal, that's a different issue. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Godney Posted July 1, 2017 Author Share Posted July 1, 2017 Plasma to answer your question these are standard 120v ac led floods Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
plasmadrive Posted July 2, 2017 Share Posted July 2, 2017 16 hours ago, Godney said: Plasma to answer your question these are standard 120v ac led floods Well, you could try a "snubber".. kinda like chicken soup.. couldn't hurt.. If you don't have a resistor laying around, just take a very small light bulb like a C7 and parallel it to the flood. If that fixes it, you have your answer.. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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