#1: LED Numberplate Bulbs Author: Hereford, Location: Mancheter AreaPosted: Thu Nov 03, 2011 2:52 am ---- Morning all,
What numberplate bulbs does the 206 take?
Are they all the same type? Or different on year?
I'm wanting some LED superbright ones.
Anyone changed theirs to LED?
Cheers
#2: Re: LED Numberplate Bulbs Author: matt.handley, Location: kentPosted: Thu Nov 03, 2011 2:55 am ---- I think its 501 been a long time since I changed it lol
#3: Re: LED Numberplate Bulbs Author: craigdmjv, Location: WiltshirePosted: Thu Nov 03, 2011 2:56 am ---- 501
#4: Re: LED Numberplate Bulbs Author: -Dave-, Location: North ManchesterPosted: Thu Nov 03, 2011 2:56 am ---- Search eBay for SMD 501 led bulbs.
#5: Re: LED Numberplate Bulbs Author: Hereford, Location: Mancheter AreaPosted: Thu Nov 03, 2011 3:06 am ---- Same as the front side lights?
I'm sure mines the long fuse type bulb... could be wrong.
Whats yours like? I have 2002 car.
When you search ebay some are 501, others like the ones i've suggested (Fuse type) The one's with the 3 led's in the middle and two silver connectors either end
#6: Re: LED Numberplate Bulbs Author: Mikey2uk, Location: StevenagePosted: Thu Nov 03, 2011 3:22 am ---- 501 bulbs on all models
#7: Re: LED Numberplate Bulbs Author: Hereford, Location: Mancheter AreaPosted: Thu Nov 03, 2011 3:27 am ---- Oh?
The number plate bulbs point straight downwards so you don't need the 5 smd lamps as a lot of the light output is wasted
Cheers Macca1411,
Just PURCHASED x4..!
Excellent. Thats what I needed!
( Any Ideas on H1 Foglight bulbs?)
I have 8000K HID lights, was looking for some fog H1 bulbs to match the colour.
Any suggestions?
Andy
#14: Re: LED Numberplate Bulbs Author: Mikey2uk, Location: StevenagePosted: Thu Nov 03, 2011 3:51 am ---- 501 SMD and dont buy the really cheap ones as you will have to buy them again in a couple of months, you al so dont need canbus ones
#15: Re: LED Numberplate Bulbs Author: Hereford, Location: Mancheter AreaPosted: Thu Nov 03, 2011 4:00 am ---- Cheers mate,
I've just bought the ones that Macca1411's got on his mate. They look pretty good to me, plus cheap!
#16: Re: LED Numberplate Bulbs Author: Mikey2uk, Location: StevenagePosted: Thu Nov 03, 2011 4:55 am ----
Hereford wrote:
Cheers mate,
I've just bought the ones that Macca1411's got on his mate. They look pretty good to me, plus cheap!
Thats where your wrong had the same ones in mine and they failed with a 2 week period they loose the solder on the pins and just fall apart
#17: Re: LED Numberplate Bulbs Author: macca1411, Location: Westhoughton, LancashirePosted: Thu Nov 03, 2011 5:32 am ----
Mikey2uk wrote:
Hereford wrote:
Cheers mate,
I've just bought the ones that Macca1411's got on his mate. They look pretty good to me, plus cheap!
Thats where your wrong had the same ones in mine and they failed with a 2 week period they loose the solder on the pins and just fall apart
I've had mine in 6 months now and still going strong.
You can't really say that buying the cheaper ones is a waste of money. I could buy the cheap ones from Hong Kong for 99p, inflate the price and sell them from the UK. It's easy enough to do, and some sellers are doing that.
The only way you can guarantee quality is to buy branded, but even then it's not 100%, the chances are they are made in the same factory as the cheap stuff.
#18: Re: LED Numberplate Bulbs Author: gazza82, Location: South BucksPosted: Thu Nov 03, 2011 5:44 am ---- I tried some for the front of the CC that are covered in a plastic dome ... like these ...
not very bright at all! Don't think they came off ebay either!
#19: Re: LED Numberplate Bulbs Author: myke, Location: United KingdomPosted: Thu Nov 03, 2011 9:14 am ----
Mikey2uk wrote:
Hereford wrote:
Cheers mate,
I've just bought the ones that Macca1411's got on his mate. They look pretty good to me, plus cheap!
Thats where your wrong had the same ones in mine and they failed with a 2 week period they loose the solder on the pins and just fall apart
I still think the ones you made with the huge panel of SMDs made the LED's look like they were meant to be there, which was cool
#20: Re: LED Numberplate Bulbs Author: Mikey2uk, Location: StevenagePosted: Thu Nov 03, 2011 9:21 am ---- You mean these
I can make them still if anyone is interested
#21: Re: LED Numberplate Bulbs Author: dumdum0910, Location: letchworthPosted: Thu Nov 03, 2011 9:26 am ---- you can buy them led number plate lights off ebay ..
#22: Re: LED Numberplate Bulbs Author: Mikey2uk, Location: StevenagePosted: Thu Nov 03, 2011 9:27 am ----
dumdum0910 wrote:
you can buy them led number plate lights off ebay ..
Yeah they are about £40 to buy I can do them for £20 posted
#23: Re: LED Numberplate Bulbs Author: Ali_H, Location: Chichester, SussexPosted: Thu Nov 03, 2011 9:31 am ---- What's the point of LED numberplate bulbs anyway?
#24: Re: LED Numberplate Bulbs Author: macca1411, Location: Westhoughton, LancashirePosted: Thu Nov 03, 2011 9:45 am ----
gazza82 wrote:
I tried some for the front of the CC that are covered in a plastic dome ... like these ...
not very bright at all! Don't think they came off ebay either!
Those ones are crap, you need the SMD LED.
This is the 5 SMD
Mikey2uk wrote:
You mean these
I can make them still if anyone is interested
I like those Mikey, no chance of someone not seeing your plate with those lit up
#25: Re: LED Numberplate Bulbs Author: gazza82, Location: South BucksPosted: Thu Nov 03, 2011 9:48 am ----
Ali_H wrote:
What's the point of LED numberplate bulbs anyway?
Last longer!!
#26: Re: LED Numberplate Bulbs Author: Ali_H, Location: Chichester, SussexPosted: Thu Nov 03, 2011 9:55 am ---- Cool beans, i've only ever needed to replace one once so i'll give it a miss lol.
#27: Re: LED Numberplate Bulbs Author: Ash, Location: Running from Ant and Lee and Adam...........Posted: Thu Nov 03, 2011 10:41 am ----
Ali_H wrote:
What's the point of LED numberplate bulbs anyway?
So the cops can read your plate easier
#28: Re: LED Numberplate Bulbs Author: Debz, Location: Cardiff, South WalesPosted: Fri Nov 04, 2011 1:17 am ---- ive got the LED number plate bulbs, how long do they last roughly as they would always blow in my last car and only last a few months (it was a ford, no comments please haha) x
#29: Re: LED Numberplate Bulbs Author: ARRAN, Location: WiltshirePosted: Fri Nov 04, 2011 10:47 am ---- i bought these ones and there very bright
#30: Re: LED Numberplate Bulbs Author: mtempsch, Location: Gothenburg, SwedenPosted: Fri Nov 04, 2011 2:18 pm ----
Debz wrote:
ive got the LED number plate bulbs, how long do they last roughly as they would always blow in my last car and only last a few months
LED's ran within their 'normal' parameters typically last 50-100.000 hours - i.e. would likely outlive the car.
But I'd believe most of the cheap stuff is likely to run them harder (higher current through them which gives more light but shortens life).
Another problem is that (white) LED's operate at ~~3-3,6V depending on exact design, and the car supplies anywhere from about 11-14,5V. If you run a single LED off the cars supply, the difference in voltage must be handled somehow... Simplest and cheapest is a series resistor that at the approximate wanted current through the LED drops the difference between supply voltage and LED operating voltage across itself. Since the supply voltage is not fixed this is pretty much a 'get it close enough' thing anyway...
Also, in a small package like a wedge bulb, the resistor can't be big, and for the possible size, the heat generated in the resistor (function of voltage across it times current through it) becomes pretty significant and might cause the resistor to burn out or solder joints to fail long before the actual LED element fails.
#31: Re: LED Numberplate Bulbs Author: Ali_H, Location: Chichester, SussexPosted: Fri Nov 04, 2011 2:27 pm ----
mtempsch wrote:
Debz wrote:
ive got the LED number plate bulbs, how long do they last roughly as they would always blow in my last car and only last a few months
LED's ran within their 'normal' parameters typically last 50-100.000 hours - i.e. would likely outlive the car.
But I'd believe most of the cheap stuff is likely to run them harder (higher current through them which gives more light but shortens life).
Another problem is that (white) LED's operate at ~~3-3,6V depending on exact design, and the car supplies anywhere from about 11-14,5V. If you run a single LED off the cars supply, the difference in voltage must be handled somehow... Simplest and cheapest is a series resistor that at the approximate wanted current through the LED drops the difference between supply voltage and LED operating voltage across itself. Since the supply voltage is not fixed this is pretty much a 'get it close enough' thing anyway...
Also, in a small package like a wedge bulb, the resistor can't be big, and for the possible size, the heat generated in the resistor (function of voltage across it times current through it) becomes pretty significant and might cause the resistor to burn out or solder joints to fail long before the actual LED element fails.
Flamin hell mate, this is Info not Wikipedia
#32: Re: LED Numberplate Bulbs Author: copey, Location: rochdalePosted: Fri Nov 04, 2011 2:35 pm ----
Ali_H wrote:
mtempsch wrote:
Debz wrote:
ive got the LED number plate bulbs, how long do they last roughly as they would always blow in my last car and only last a few months
LED's ran within their 'normal' parameters typically last 50-100.000 hours - i.e. would likely outlive the car.
But I'd believe most of the cheap stuff is likely to run them harder (higher current through them which gives more light but shortens life).
Another problem is that (white) LED's operate at ~~3-3,6V depending on exact design, and the car supplies anywhere from about 11-14,5V. If you run a single LED off the cars supply, the difference in voltage must be handled somehow... Simplest and cheapest is a series resistor that at the approximate wanted current through the LED drops the difference between supply voltage and LED operating voltage across itself. Since the supply voltage is not fixed this is pretty much a 'get it close enough' thing anyway...
Also, in a small package like a wedge bulb, the resistor can't be big, and for the possible size, the heat generated in the resistor (function of voltage across it times current through it) becomes pretty significant and might cause the resistor to burn out or solder joints to fail long before the actual LED element fails.
Flamin hell mate, this is Info not Wikipedia
well if the information is true, it certainly aint wikipedia
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