Hi Dave,Yes I have. There was also a design in Nuts&Volts a while back. 
Generally if you keep the duty cycle low  (<1:20) and pulses short (<20ms) you 
can push most LED's to about ten times their maximum continuous rated current 
without ill effect. Looking at the continuous and pulse ratings of IR LED's can 
give an idea of the "abuse" LED's can handle. Some small white LEDs do have 
pulse specifications, they are used as the flash in cell phone cameras.  They 
make very good small strobes with much less "tail" than the 
$200 miniature Hamamatsu xenon tubes we were comparing them to. 
Robert.G8RPI.

--- On Sat, 30/1/10, Dave Martindale <dave.martind...@gmail.com> wrote:

From: Dave Martindale <dave.martind...@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: [time-nuts] White LED's
To: "Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement" <time-nuts@febo.com>
Date: Saturday, 30 January, 2010, 19:12

Hmm.  Has anyone built a strobe light using LEDs instead of a xenon flash 
tube?  I can see the appeal of building something that doesn't need high 
voltage to fire or trigger the tube.  Yes, you probably couldn't get as much 
light as a big Xenon tube, but there are applications where you don't need to 
illuminate a large area.  (Recent example of where I wished I had a 
stroboscope: looking at the balance wheel of a pocket watch).

How high can you push the drive current of a LED if the pulse is short?  Of 
course you have to keep the average dissipation below what the device is rated 
for, but there must be a peak current limit too.

    Dave

On 30/01/2010 01:17, Robert Atkinson wrote:
> Hi,I'm late to the thread (as usual), but have looked at these LED's in the 
> past. It was for a biotech imaging application. There are two types, a 
> red/green/blue cluster or a blue / near UV LED with a white phosphor. These 
> phosphors seem to have a fairly continuous spectrum, at least compared to 
> fluorescent lamps and HID lamps. What surprised me was the speed. We had a 
> strobe application for which a xenon strobe was proposed. I tried LED's (our 
> optics "expert" said even normal LED's would not be fast enough). I knew 
> normal LED's are fast enough but was unsure about the phosphor types. To my 
> surprise they where faster than the xenon tube! They were faster than my 
> detector. This has has an impact on the mill illumination in that you can get 
> strobe effects that could cause you to think the spindle was stationary when 
> it was not. This is more of a problem in a noisy environment than a home shop 
> with only one machine running.  Robert G8RPI.
> 
>    



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