Author Topic: LED if fuse is blown  (Read 467 times)

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Offline okwTopic starter

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LED if fuse is blown
« on: Yesterday at 07:34:13 pm »
I have 12V in -> a slide switch -> and a fuse. I want to have a red and green LED, so the green is lit when the fuse is intact, and red when the fuse is blown.
Question is, will this MOSFET (or simple transistor) work as intended? And is it safe, since a failed MOSFET will bridge fused and unfused side? I do not wanna damage my brand new motorcycle.
 

Offline coromonadalix

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Re: LED if fuse is blown
« Reply #1 on: Yesterday at 08:07:18 pm »
from google
 

Online themadhippy

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Re: LED if fuse is blown
« Reply #2 on: Yesterday at 08:09:55 pm »
Quote
I want to have a red and green LED, so the green is lit when the fuse is intact, and red when the fuse is blown.
why complicate things? A led and resistor in parallel with the fuse will light when the fuse is blown
 

Offline ataradov

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Re: LED if fuse is blown
« Reply #3 on: Yesterday at 09:59:10 pm »
BigClive just did a video on that in the last couple weeks.
Alex
 

Offline floobydust

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Re: LED if fuse is blown
« Reply #4 on: Yesterday at 11:32:49 pm »
You can also buy automotive blade fuses with the built-in LED. They cost a bit more and still reasonable.
https://www.littelfuse.com/products/fuses/automotive-aftermarket-products/indicator-fuses/mini-smart-glow.aspx

I would avoid the cheap china (and LED) fuses, they are found to be terrible in not blowing, or far above their rating. Dangerous, many youtube videos showing they are unsafe crap.
If the motorcycle's load is a problem with shorts, you could use a PTC polyfuse as well as the fuse.
 

Offline bostonman

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Re: LED if fuse is blown
« Reply #5 on: Today at 01:19:12 am »
Would adding a fuse in series with the LED and resistor be safer? If the LED happens to short then that could be dangerous.
 

Offline ataradov

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Re: LED if fuse is blown
« Reply #6 on: Today at 01:24:21 am »
If used for relatively high currents, then LED won't remain shorted for long.
Alex
 
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Offline bostonman

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Re: LED if fuse is blown
« Reply #7 on: Today at 02:15:22 am »
Quote
If used for relatively high currents, then LED won't remain shorted for long.

I agree, but thought it was worth mentioning.
 

Offline Andy Chee

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Re: LED if fuse is blown
« Reply #8 on: Today at 03:18:27 am »
I do not wanna damage my brand new motorcycle.
The existing fuse-LEDs available from your automotive parts store should be suitable for your motorcycle.  No need to design a complicated MOSFET circuit.

 

Offline SteveThackery

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Re: LED if fuse is blown
« Reply #9 on: Today at 11:37:16 am »
I agree with the previous posters.

I advise that you forget the red/green thing and just have one light which comes on when the fuse is blown. Back in the day I fitted a "grain of rice" tungsten bulb across the fuse (it was all low voltage stuff, typically 12V, so no safety issues). Nowadays you can use a bidirectional LED (plus series resistor if it's not built in).

Bearing in mind that it will probably never blow the fuse anyway, anything more complicated would be way over the top.
 

Offline Zero999

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Re: LED if fuse is blown
« Reply #10 on: Today at 12:38:19 pm »
from google
The circuit won't work, unless the positions of the red and green LEDs are exchanged, but then the red LED will light if the fuse is good or the green one will light if it's bad.


Adding a couple of diodes (one might be enough, it depends on the forward voltage of the green LED, one will probably suffice for yellowish-green GaP, but you'll need two for pure green InGaN) in series with the red LED, will make the circuit work, as the original poster wants.

R1 isn't needed, unless the intention is for the LED to light, when the supply voltage exceeds a certain threshold.


EDIT:
Another option is to use the original circuit and, rather than a real red LED, a phosphor converted LED, i.e. pink or white, if you can't get red (add a red filter if needed) and an old yellowish-green GaP green LED, which will have a lower forward votlage.
« Last Edit: Today at 04:41:41 pm by Zero999 »
 


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