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My LEDs

KendallP
Explorer
Explorer
FYI: I have been posting updates for those of us who have already read the OP below. For anyone new to the thread, it might be best to skip down below all of these updates, read the body of the post (beginning with "THE OP BEGINS HERE") and THEN read the updates.

***UPDATE***
(03/07/12)
Z71 4x4 has weighed in on these ~$5 ebay panels mentioned below; the 36-1210 panels vs the 24-5050s vs 1141 incandescent bulbs. His conclusions are as follows...

"The 24-5050 looked green to me and my DW. These will end up in my basement storage.
The 36-1210 were very close to the natural 1141 color, maybe a shade more white (which we like), and seemed a little brighter."

Post Here


***UPDATE***
(02/21/12)
When searching for LEDs that are comparable to the incandescent bulbs they are replacing, the rule of thumb that I use is 1:5, i.e. a 3W LED bulb will give you roughly the same lumen output as a 15W incandescent bulb. A panel that focuses all of the light where it belongs should beat this a bit... perhaps more like 1:6 or 1:7. So a 3W panel might get you the same output as a 20W bulb or so... maybe.

Also... if you want incandescent color temperature, i.e. if you want the LEDs to look as close as possible to incandescent bulbs in color... look for units in the 3200-3500K range. 6500K is more like "blue white." I have one that is 4200K. It's not too bad, but it is noticeably "bluer" than my 3200K LEDs and incandescents.

As always...

YMMV

๐Ÿ™‚


***UPDATE***
36 SMD LED Panels now come with BA15S (1141, 1156) male socket ends. Other socket options here. And then there's this version from eric1514. This 24 LED panel with brighter LEDs is probably a little brighter than the 36 LED panel. Both are brighter than an 1141. The 24 may be as bright as an 1156.

***UDPATE***
(9/29/11)
Dave-Sparky has done some thorough testing on these 36 SMD panels with excellent results for 8 months now.
Post Here

(01/21-12)
1 Year for Dave-Sparky so far


***UPDATE***
06/05/12
Though far from the majority... a few are having trouble with the $5 LED panels staying stuck with their sticky back tape. Below is a solution from Kamphiker, though beware that 3M tape may be TOO good and when LED panel replacement time comes... you may have a problem...

Kamphiker wrote:
Those inexpensive LED panel lights from China are a PITA to keep mounted in the ceiling. The South Florida heat just melts the foam/adhesive that came with these lights (I have seen 94ยฐ F. inside the RV with the A/C off ceiling temps are even higher).

I tried adding a dab of silicone with no luck, Tried hot glue gun stick better than silicone but still failure.

I found the solution, 3M VHB Tape. Maximum Temperature 300ยฐ F. excellent adhesion. There are a lot of sources to purchase (Mcmaster, Fastenal etc.). I looked in Grainger and they have some on closeout like 3M VHB High Temperature Tape

When looking at the tape there are several different ones available, standard is good for 200ยฐ F. & High Temp. 300ยฐ F.



THE OP BEGINS HERE...

I created this thread as a canned response to anyone asking about LEDs.

I have done a ton of research on LEDs and sampled several different types. These are what I have in my rig, and I am very happy with all of them. And at present, the prices I paid are tough to beat.

(The following is a bit of stumping on the merits of LEDs for boondocking. If you're already sold on the idea, just skip ahead to "My LED's" above the 1st photo.)


I have found that LEDs generally use about 1/5 the power and heat of incandescent or less, per the same color type and amount of light. For boondockers, LEDs are a no-brainer. I started by replacing one each in my double overhead fixtures and the light is more than adequate for our family... including the DW. All this for a mere hundred clams.

I later added a few more, but I doubt I'm up to $150. I still have 1 incandescent bulb in each of the 3-double overhead fixtures and 1 in each of the 2 bunk bed reading fixtures. The bunk lights never get used and unless we're hooked to shore, we refrain from using both bulbs in each of the overheads; yet this still allows for more light than we need.

The best part about the LEDs is the peace of mind. I no longer care one bit if lights are on because I know they're drawing such a negligible amount of energy: for example the one in the exterior door handle. If I left it on all night for say 10 hours, it would cost me about 3A. This is less than 1/100 of my total battery bank capacity. A typical inverter uses almost twice the power in standby mode!

If every single one of my LED lights are on at one time (rare)... I figure they're using about 3A. My 13" TV alone uses 6! (The TV is on the upgrade list, but that's for another thread.)

Some more perspective...

A typical 1141 RV bulb is rated at about 18W. With comparable light output, 9 of mine are in the 3.6W range and the rest are rated much lower.

Depending on temperature, my battery bank is capable of a solid 170A before it runs down to 50%. I could leave all 13 of these lights on 24 hours for almost 2 and half days before reaching this point.


My LEDs

I have 8 of these total. 3 in my overhead fixtures, 2 in the closet (thanks to RoyB,) one in the shower and one in the exterior door handle fixture. I also have 2 of the ba15d versions in my little bedroom lamp. Some RFI noted by ham radio guys, but I have yet to experience any. This is caused by the built-in regulator that gives these bulbs a wide range of voltage handling. This should allow for very good longevity.

***EDIT***
6/7/11
There appear to be unregulated bulbs of this type on ebay now. They may or may not last as long as regulated. They may run a little warmer and if they are truly unregulated, they shouldn't cause any RFI... for those who have this concern.

About 0.3A each...

LED Wholesalers on ebay

Most recent find 6-7-11

Also, you might Try These. They appear to have the same LEDs, but for about a third the price. I haven't tried them yet, personally, though. But for the price, I would definitely try one. They also have 24 LED units, which I'm guessing would be more like 1156 incandescent bulbs.

As always...

YMMV





One in overhead is the bulb above. The other is an 1141 incandescent. Both are clearly warmer in color than fluorescent...








1 of these in my range hood. Excellent deal! No RFI. Longevity is yet undetermined. (Update) Note that THEY NOW COME in a ba15s (1156-type) base. Color is slightly to the red of incandescent. The bulbs above are closer in color, but not by a huge margin.

Again, I think about 0.3A each...

A Chinese ebay Store








I have 3 of these in my courtesy floor fixtures. Couldn't find warm white and standard, blue white was too bright. My wife and I really like the amber color of these. Reminds us a bit of the movie theater. They're perfect for us and chew up almost zero energy, I believe about 0.1A for all 3!

Ebay search for "BA9S LED Amber"





Here's one next to an incandescent...





And next to a blue-white LED...








And most recently, one of these in the airliner-style, swivel reading fixture over the couch. They also sell them in pairs for a hair less each. This one comes right to the edge of my fixture. It is just the right diameter. You can see the LEDs, but it doesn't bother me. It is not warm white, but is not blue-white either (more photos below.) Retailer was forthright with light color temperature and I found his auction pages to be especially detailed, honest and accurate.

The bulb puts out a very comparable amount of light to the OEM bulb at about 1/10 the power draw... about 0.2A...

Taiwan ebay retailer







OK. Got some photos of the reading light installed. You don't notice it unless you're looking right at it.













And here it is in action. I took the pictures this afternoon. Of course the only time the sun decided to peek through the clouds today was right when I wanted to shoot. But I think it's clear the bulb is plenty bright for the application. Again... I feel it's very similar in brightness to the OEM incandescent bulb. These 2 photos were taken with the same aperture and shutter speeds. Evaluative white balance was also used for each. Also note that the light color is not blue-white...





More and more folks have now ordered these 1139F replacement reading bulbs and the response appears to be overwhelmingly positive. Here's a thread on it.



Command Electronics has been a popular place to get some panels, but they were always too bright for my tastes. Recently they have added a smaller panel that is similar to the one I have above, but does have the ba15s adapter.



These 21 LED panels are on this page along with the brighter 30 LED ones.


Cheers
.
Cheers,
Kendall
310 REPLIES 310

KendallP
Explorer
Explorer
Ha! Yeah. These days I pretty well only run the Onan to exercise the engine and generator side.

You're very welcome. Glad it's all working out for you.

For those who are concerned about heat, most of my LEDs are the bulb-type. A little light is lost to the reflector, but not much. And the bulbs are regulated, run relatively cool and are not attached directly to the reflector in an enclosed space. The only panel I currently have is in the range hood, i.e. attached to sheet metal and not enclosed.

Of course the Hams like RoyB, who are concerned about RFI don't want the regulated units. And he seems to be doing just fine with his $5 panels.
Cheers,
Kendall

JiminDenver
Explorer
Explorer
I agree, Thank you Kendall for this thread. Without it and other threads like it I would have never ordered LEDs for the trailer.

I'm extremely happy with the cheap panels I bought. As bright as the originals and the color is very close. I don't charge at night so I am hoping I wont see any heat issues. Should the tape start giving I'll just put a tiny screw in the reflector plate to hold them up.

My thread

Thank you also for our earlier discussion too. It has taken me into a different direction than just running the Champ every day. Beside replacing the lights with LEDs I am also doubling the battery bank and have 450w of panel waiting to go up on the roof. ( boy did I get lucky with those) After buying the Rogue and bits I need to install, I should be right at the $500 mark you said I should spend on solar.
Not only will I be able to use the lights and furnace again, the poor old Champion will be lonely. ๐Ÿ™‚
2011 GulfStream Amerilite 25BH
2003 Ford Expedition with 435w tilting portable/ TS-MPPT-45
750w solar , TS-MPPT-60 on the trailer
675 Ah bank, Trip-lite 1250fc inverter
Sportsman 2200w inverter generator

westend
Explorer
Explorer
I've installed a few of the Chinese LED panels, both 36 SMD and 48 SMD panels. I bought them through Asian sellers on EBay, choosing the least expensive panels I could find. IIRC, the sellers were linked in the first few posts of this thread. Since my vintage Starcraft's fixtures were in such tough shape (cracked or missing diffusers, rusty sockets, etc.), I housed the panels in card frames that I picked up at the Dollar store and wired them direct to the 12 v. system.
What I found is that color differs between sellers, choosing "warm white" may get a slight difference between the various panels. The 36 SMD panels are not enough light for task lighting, IMO but may be enough for some users. The 48 SMD panels are bright enough for any use and the color is generally indistinguishable from incandescent bulbs they replaced. Heat isn't an issue, I attached the 3M tape on the back of the panels onto aluminum sheet that either fit inside the small fixtures or, in one location, onto 1/8" aluminum plate. Judging from an infrared measurement of the glass diffuser, they are quite a bit cooler running than incandescents.
Hats off to Kendall for breaking ground on the LED's and posting about his use of them. They are certainly a savings in wattage and should prove to be a good replacement of the stock auto bulbs.
'03 F-250 4x4 CC
'71 Starcraft Wanderstar -- The Cowboy/Hilton

xiaoneitie
Explorer
Explorer
nice job on this makes me want to put in some night lighting

JiminDenver
Explorer
Explorer
KendallP wrote:
d-mac1 wrote:
So...haven't read this whole thread yet, but thought LEDs would be the way to go to save power when boondocking. I've got quite a few fixtures with 921s in em and a couple with 1156. I'd like some LEDs that look like incandescant lights and have about the same light output as my stock bulbs. What is a good LED? I don't want Chinese******that starts going out right away like a recent poster.

And whats this about LEDs running real hot? I thought they'd be cooler than the incandescant bulbs.

Are there any voltage concerns when replacing stock bulbs with LEDs?

Thanks.

Lots of us have Chinese "******" bulbs and panels with many, many hours on them with no problems whatsoever. Even unregulated panels have shown to tolerate equalizing-type voltages (16V.)

Agreed on the "Warm White" designation

As far as heat, yeah... I think you need to keep reading through the thread. I had thought we addressed that.


This post gave me the nerve to try some cheap 48 led panels and some smaller sets too for softer lighting. I hope to not need to use the rechargeable lights I have been.
2011 GulfStream Amerilite 25BH
2003 Ford Expedition with 435w tilting portable/ TS-MPPT-45
750w solar , TS-MPPT-60 on the trailer
675 Ah bank, Trip-lite 1250fc inverter
Sportsman 2200w inverter generator

KendallP
Explorer
Explorer
***UPDATE***
(added to OP - 06/05/12)

Some are having trouble with the $5 LED panels staying stuck with their sticky back tape. Here is a good solution from Kamphiker...

Kamphiker wrote:
Those inexpensive LED panel lights from China are a PITA to keep mounted in the ceiling. The South Florida heat just melts the foam/adhesive that came with these lights (I have seen 94ยฐ F. inside the RV with the A/C off ceiling temps are even higher).

I tried adding a dab of silicone with no luck, Tried hot glue gun stick better than silicone but still failure.

I found the solution, 3M VHB Tape. Maximum Temperature 300ยฐ F. excellent adhesion. There are a lot of sources to purchase (Mcmaster, Fastenal etc.). I looked in Grainger and they have some on closeout like 3M VHB High Temperature Tape

When looking at the tape there are several different ones available, standard is good for 200ยฐ F. & High Temp. 300ยฐ F.
Cheers,
Kendall

KendallP
Explorer
Explorer
d-mac1 wrote:
So...haven't read this whole thread yet, but thought LEDs would be the way to go to save power when boondocking. I've got quite a few fixtures with 921s in em and a couple with 1156. I'd like some LEDs that look like incandescant lights and have about the same light output as my stock bulbs. What is a good LED? I don't want Chinese******that starts going out right away like a recent poster.

And whats this about LEDs running real hot? I thought they'd be cooler than the incandescant bulbs.

Are there any voltage concerns when replacing stock bulbs with LEDs?

Thanks.

Lots of us have Chinese "******" bulbs and panels with many, many hours on them with no problems whatsoever. Even unregulated panels have shown to tolerate equalizing-type voltages (16V.)

Agreed on the "Warm White" designation

As far as heat, yeah... I think you need to keep reading through the thread. I had thought we addressed that.
Cheers,
Kendall

ib516
Explorer II
Explorer II
I just bought a few of THESE to try.

48 LED panels, 190 Lumens, $3.29 each w/free shipping in warm white.

I'll see how they work out brightness/longevity wise. I plan on only replacing a few of the incandescent lights with LEDs at a time, and then when we are boondocking, we will use the fixtures with the LEDs installed.
Prev: 2010 Cougar 322QBS (junk)
02 Dodge 2500 4x4 5.9L CTD 3.55
07 Dodge 3500 4x4 SRW Mega 5.9L CTD 3.73
14 Ram 2500 4x4 Crew 6.4L Hemi 4.10
06 Chevy 1500 4x4 E-Cab 3.73 5.3L
07 Dodge 1500 5.7L Hemi 3.55 / 2010 Jayco 17z
All above are sold, no longer own an RV

jimintomah
Explorer
Explorer
I would also recommend the warm white led's from ledtrailerlights.com
I replaced most of my bulbs with their led's last summer and this spring I replaced the rest of them.
Jim & Kathy & The Dog
2019 Winnebago Adventurer 35F

mena661
Explorer
Explorer
They do run cooler but are still warm to the touch. If you want to spend the bucks for good LED's look no further than LEDtrailerlights.com. You'll pay 3 times more but these are great quality LEDs. I have quite a few of these in my 5er and they put out excellent light. They also have voltage regulators and can be used from 10-30V. When looking for LEDs, always make sure they state "warm white" if you want the incandescent look. They have 252 lumen 921's there which are equal to your standard 921's. They used to have 300 lumen 921's which are noticeably brighter than the OEM 921's.

EDIT: They also have 1156/1141 bulbs.

d-mac1
Explorer
Explorer
So...haven't read this whole thread yet, but thought LEDs would be the way to go to save power when boondocking. I've got quite a few fixtures with 921s in em and a couple with 1156. I'd like some LEDs that look like incandescant lights and have about the same light output as my stock bulbs. What is a good LED? I don't want Chinese******that starts going out right away like a recent poster.

And whats this about LEDs running real hot? I thought they'd be cooler than the incandescant bulbs.

Are there any voltage concerns when replacing stock bulbs with LEDs?

Thanks.
2009 Ram 2500 CTD
2012 XLR Thunderbolt 300X10

KendallP
Explorer
Explorer
JimInMich wrote:
Received the $5 one from 2011_LED today ( not bad, 8 days shipped from China ). At 1st, they all worked, then after about 10 mins, 3 of the LED's stopped working. Then 3 more LED's started blinking, then stopped working:

Before the 6 stopped working, they look pretty good ( left one is LED, right is reg bulb )

Well that stinks.

Sorry they didn't work out for ya'. Is it safe to ASSume that the voltage was below 15?
Cheers,
Kendall

JimInMich
Explorer
Explorer
Received the $5 one from 2011_LED today ( not bad, 8 days shipped from China ). At 1st, they all worked, then after about 10 mins, 3 of the LED's stopped working. Then 3 more LED's started blinking, then stopped working:


Before the 6 stopped working, they look pretty good ( left one is LED, right is reg bulb )
Current: 1987 Georgie Boy Encounter 34',John Deere chassis,460c.i./C6.
SOLD-2012 Cougar XLite 27RLS
SOLD-2008 Aerolite 24FB
SOLD-2004 Shadow Cruiser Fun Finder 189FBR
Just the Wife and I.

KendallP
Explorer
Explorer
JimInMich wrote:
KendallP wrote:
That last one appears to maybe not be a "warm white" unit. Was that your intention?


oops, no. I missed that. Oh well.

Might be worth a try to contact the seller and see if they can sub a warm white one for you. Can't hurt. Otherwise your test is going to be off and your money well spent on the right one, IMO.
Cheers,
Kendall

JimInMich
Explorer
Explorer
KendallP wrote:
That last one appears to maybe not be a "warm white" unit. Was that your intention?


oops, no. I missed that. Oh well.
Current: 1987 Georgie Boy Encounter 34',John Deere chassis,460c.i./C6.
SOLD-2012 Cougar XLite 27RLS
SOLD-2008 Aerolite 24FB
SOLD-2004 Shadow Cruiser Fun Finder 189FBR
Just the Wife and I.