โNov-19-2015 04:38 PM
โNov-23-2015 05:43 PM
โNov-23-2015 06:13 AM
DeadeyeLefty wrote:rrev wrote:
I'm trying to figure out how to wire a led strip inside my pass through compartment that has a push button to turn on the light when you open either door.Do I need to run wires from one side to the other between the switches like a 3 way in your house? Do I need a special switch? Anyone ever do this?
Or you could just use NO (normally open) pin switches like the fridge light or the dome lights in your car ? Had your rig come with that as an option, that's how it would have been done.
Wired in parallel and then to the light, the light will go on when either of the doors is opened and off when they're both shut. No 3-way wiring, no worry about the lights being left on accidentally, and no need to switch the negative lead. Easy peasy.
โNov-22-2015 08:02 PM
rrev wrote:
I'm trying to figure out how to wire a led strip inside my pass through compartment that has a push button to turn on the light when you open either door.Do I need to run wires from one side to the other between the switches like a 3 way in your house? Do I need a special switch? Anyone ever do this?
โNov-20-2015 12:41 PM
tenbear wrote:GordonThree wrote:tenbear wrote:Ivylog wrote:
Chris is saying to power it from both ends with simple on/off switchs. Put 12V to the red leads.
You probably should power each end from the same 12v circuit. If not, when you open the doors on both sides two 12v circuits will be shorted together.
that's not a problem, unless your RV has some really weird setup where there are two different 12v systems that don't share a ground somehow.
voltage is potential and nothing more, you could have 10 12v batteries connected to the LED strip, as long as their grounds were all connected, it's still just 12v.
If you use 2 different 12v circuits you are putting 2 fuses in parallel when both doors are open. Thus the circuits have too large a fuse for the wiring. Also if one of the circuits has a large current drain, the current will be divided between the two fuses and some of the current will be flowing in the small wiring on the light strip. IMHO, not a good idea.
โNov-20-2015 12:27 PM
โNov-20-2015 11:36 AM
GordonThree wrote:tenbear wrote:Ivylog wrote:
Chris is saying to power it from both ends with simple on/off switchs. Put 12V to the red leads.
You probably should power each end from the same 12v circuit. If not, when you open the doors on both sides two 12v circuits will be shorted together.
that's not a problem, unless your RV has some really weird setup where there are two different 12v systems that don't share a ground somehow.
voltage is potential and nothing more, you could have 10 12v batteries connected to the LED strip, as long as their grounds were all connected, it's still just 12v.
โNov-20-2015 10:06 AM
โNov-20-2015 08:15 AM
โNov-20-2015 06:40 AM
โNov-20-2015 06:18 AM
tenbear wrote:navegator wrote:
Wire it the same way as a stair in a house, with double pole double trow switches and yes you will need to run wires across the bay.
navegator
Single pole double throw switches are required for turning the lights off or on from either of two locations.
โNov-20-2015 04:21 AM
tenbear wrote:Ivylog wrote:
Chris is saying to power it from both ends with simple on/off switchs. Put 12V to the red leads.
You probably should power each end from the same 12v circuit. If not, when you open the doors on both sides two 12v circuits will be shorted together.
โNov-19-2015 06:05 PM
Ivylog wrote:
Chris is saying to power it from both ends with simple on/off switchs. Put 12V to the red leads.
โNov-19-2015 05:57 PM
navegator wrote:
Wire it the same way as a stair in a house, with double pole double trow switches and yes you will need to run wires across the bay.
navegator
โNov-19-2015 05:45 PM