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  1. Home
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  3. LED Strip: Heat vs. Waterproofing

LED Strip: Heat vs. Waterproofing

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  • J Offline
    J Offline
    johnyradio
    wrote on last edited by
    #1

    Hi

    Any tips on waterproofing an LED strip,
    while allowing heat to escape?

    Or, heat-sinking an already waterproofed strip,
    or strip with waterproofed LED's?

    thx

    mfalkviddM 1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • ThetaDevT Offline
      ThetaDevT Offline
      ThetaDev
      wrote on last edited by
      #2

      There are two types of waterproof LED strips available:

      • the ones with some clear and flexible gunk on the top side covering the LEDs
      • the ones with clear silicone tubing all around them

      The first type can be heatsinked pretty easily by just sticking it on top of an aluminum profile, which can conduct some of the heat away

      The second type however is thermally isolated by the tube, so the only way of keeping it cool is not to operate it in a hot environment. To further reduce the heat you can of course use one with less LEDs per meter or PWM-dim the strip.

      Personally I have never had heat problems with LED strips and mine are just glued to an aluminum profile and then screwed onto my furniture.
      What would be your use case for the strips?

      J 1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • J johnyradio

        Hi

        Any tips on waterproofing an LED strip,
        while allowing heat to escape?

        Or, heat-sinking an already waterproofed strip,
        or strip with waterproofed LED's?

        thx

        mfalkviddM Offline
        mfalkviddM Offline
        mfalkvidd
        Mod
        wrote on last edited by
        #3

        @johnywhy will the strips be in water? If that's the case, and the water is not too warm, the water will probably conduct the heat very well, keeping the leds relatively cool.

        1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • ThetaDevT ThetaDev

          There are two types of waterproof LED strips available:

          • the ones with some clear and flexible gunk on the top side covering the LEDs
          • the ones with clear silicone tubing all around them

          The first type can be heatsinked pretty easily by just sticking it on top of an aluminum profile, which can conduct some of the heat away

          The second type however is thermally isolated by the tube, so the only way of keeping it cool is not to operate it in a hot environment. To further reduce the heat you can of course use one with less LEDs per meter or PWM-dim the strip.

          Personally I have never had heat problems with LED strips and mine are just glued to an aluminum profile and then screwed onto my furniture.
          What would be your use case for the strips?

          J Offline
          J Offline
          johnyradio
          wrote on last edited by johnyradio
          #4

          @ThetaDev said in LED Strip: Heat vs. Waterproofing:

          the ones with some clear and flexible gunk on the top side covering the LEDs can be heatsinked pretty easily by just sticking it on top of an aluminum profile

          • How do you make or obtain the aluminum profile?
          • Where/how do you make holes in the strip?

          What would be your use case for the strips?

          Bolted to things which might get warm (to the touch), in a warm environment, which might be exposed to rain.

          The strip will not be underwater.

          thx

          zboblamontZ 1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • mfalkviddM Offline
            mfalkviddM Offline
            mfalkvidd
            Mod
            wrote on last edited by
            #5

            I have bought leds with profiles from this store https://www.aliexpress.com/item/5pcs-package-50CM-5730-rigid-strip-LED-Bar-Light-Kitchen-led-light-bar-36LEDs-LED-DC/32417801762.html - not sure if they have exactly what you're looking for though.

            1 Reply Last reply
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            • J johnyradio

              @ThetaDev said in LED Strip: Heat vs. Waterproofing:

              the ones with some clear and flexible gunk on the top side covering the LEDs can be heatsinked pretty easily by just sticking it on top of an aluminum profile

              • How do you make or obtain the aluminum profile?
              • Where/how do you make holes in the strip?

              What would be your use case for the strips?

              Bolted to things which might get warm (to the touch), in a warm environment, which might be exposed to rain.

              The strip will not be underwater.

              thx

              zboblamontZ Offline
              zboblamontZ Offline
              zboblamont
              wrote on last edited by
              #6

              @johnywhy What you need is weatherproof rather than waterproof. Most weatherproof LED strip does get quite warm but the self heat dissipates safely. If the surface to which it is to be attached gets quite hot, perhaps insulation from that surface might be a solution?

              1 Reply Last reply
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              • J Offline
                J Offline
                johnyradio
                wrote on last edited by johnyradio
                #7

                @zboblamont said in LED Strip: Heat vs. Waterproofing:

                @johnywhy If the surface to which it is to be attached gets quite hot, perhaps insulation from that surface might be a solution?

                Good suggestion!

                1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • K Offline
                  K Offline
                  karenberys
                  Banned
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #8

                  Even if there are quite a few differences between these two types, plus they have not only different shape, but also the raw material is different

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