http://www.ltechonline.com/html/en/Dimmable-LED-Driver/DMX-RDM-Series/DMX-CC-Driver/
take a look at these - these models have an inbuilt psu as well, with a wide range of current and voltage
They also do multichannel models without the psu
http://www.ltechonline.com/html/en/LED-Controller/DMX-RDM-Controller/DMX-PWM-CC-type/LT-858-CC.html
although these drivers seem to be limited to 1050ma
this one goes upto 1750ma
as a matter of interest for me, what leds were you looking at?
the log curve is a function of the dmx controller (ie loxones perception correction) not the driver so you dont need to worry about that bit
all CC dimmers still use pwm, delivering the stated current all the time but with pwm on/off - linear cc drivers would be too inefficient otherwise.
http://www.ltechonline.com/html/en/Dimmable-LED-Driver/DMX-RDM-Series/DMX-CC-Driver/
take a look at these - these models have an inbuilt psu as well, with a wide range of current and voltage
They also do multichannel models without the psu
http://www.ltechonline.com/html/en/LED-Controller/DMX-RDM-Controller/DMX-PWM-CC-type/LT-858-CC.html
although these drivers seem to be limited to 1050ma
this one goes upto 1750ma
http://www.ltechonline.com/html/en/products/DMX-RDM-Controller/DMX-CC-Driver/DMX-50-500-1750-F1P1.html
as a matter of interest for me, what leds were you looking at?
I've used Eldoled PowerDrive for all my CC downlights (Orluna units). Very happy with the dimming - perfect right down to zero to my eyes. No visible flicker due to the high frequency PWM.
The drivers themselves can be configured with a logarithmic curve, or you can do it in Loxone config. I don't think the bit quantisation would be visible whichever way you do it.
You'll need the Eldoled tool to program the drivers - to set the constant current level, DMX channel, etc.
Seb
Once you're over 300-400 Hz, visible (even subliminal) flicker shouldn't be possible. I am inordinately sensitive to it, and my system at 450 Hz seems fine.
Note that something many people don't seem to realize is that PWM frequency doesn't change depending on dimming level... the pulses just get shorter, and the gaps longer.
Using PWM internally is fine, but a good constant-current dimmer would then smooth the output to produce a near-constant current.
Actually, the PowerDrive does change its frequency it seems. They call it "hybrid drive" or something. At lower levels, the frequency is lower. This may be an engineering solution to handle minimum turn-on times in lights or in the internal hardware. At higher brightness the frequency goes up to what seems to be kHz+, before becoming seemingly solid.
Yeah I have that cable and I played around with this. I get better results by using the driver's curve. Notably, the driver also does *way* smoother fading than letting loxone do fading. So the right config is to do both curve and fade at the driver, not on the loxone side.
If you measure the voltage required to drive each string at max current you can add a series current limiting resistor and run them in constant voltage mode but that would require different drivers.
You shouldn't run series in parallel with a constant current source. The risk is a much larger current going through one string and burning out that led string. If the number of LEDs in each string is higher then it becomes lower risk.
If you measure the voltage required to drive each string at max current you can add a series current limiting resistor and run them in constant voltage mode but that would require different drivers.
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You could do this for each lamp rather than pairs but it depends on their voltage and is slightly less efficient, but wiring is easier as singles. Since they are cob LEDs each one is already a series string of LEDs hence the highvoltage per unit.
We found this device recently to exactly balance the LEDs - it takes a constant current source and splits it into two matched strings of LED's. ATX-LED AL-Doubler https://www.shop.atxled.com/products/al-doubler?variant=17623340384371 - up to 22 watts of LEDs can be balanced.
They also have DMX wall Switches - that look like regular wall switches AL-DMX-WS https://www.shop.atxled.com/products/al-dmx-switch-dmx-wall-dimmer