Jeff is correct, I did use those. I used the 3 ft of the 120 LED/m to replace 1 fluorescent in the ceiling. I think it is very bright, but I may be biased... Scott saw it in action though, what say you Scott - bright enough for the main cabin?

I'm sure that other suppliers would be cheaper, I was more looking for a quick trial so bought local. E-bay is good...

I also stuck the LED strips on a hunk of stainless for heatsinking.

Graham Collins
Secret Plans
C&C 35-III #11

On 2013-04-09 3:12 PM, Jeffrey Nelson wrote:
Pretty sure Graham used these:
http://www.leevalley.com/en/hardware/page.aspx?cat=3,70322&p=70323


On 04/09/13, *Bill Coleman * <colt...@verizon.net> wrote:

Fred,

Do you have a link to the LED's you used?

Bill Coleman

C&C 39 animated_favicon1

*From:*CnC-List [mailto:cnc-list-boun...@cnc-list.com] *On Behalf Of *Fred Hazzard
*Sent:* Tuesday, April 09, 2013 12:46 AM
*To:* cnc-list@cnc-list.com
*Subject:* Re: Stus-List Strip LEDs Cabin Lighting

I put LED strips in place of fluorescents that were on the ceiling behind defusers. I control them with wireless controllers that dim and turn them on and off. The LED's are very bright and being able to dim them improves the cabin ambiance a lot.

Fred Hazzard

S/V Fury

C&C 44

Portland, Or

*From:*CnC-List [mailto:cnc-list-boun...@cnc-list.com] *On Behalf Of *Graham Collins
*Sent:* Monday, April 08, 2013 5:03 PM
*To:* cnc-list@cnc-list.com
*Subject:* Re: Stus-List Strip LEDs Cabin Lighting

Switches.  I was going to add a dimmer, but have changed my mind.

Graham Collins
Secret Plans
C&C 35-III #11

On 2013-04-05 10:00 AM, Joel Aronson wrote:

    Are people adding in-line switches to the LED strips or just
    switching them at the breaker?

    Joel

    35/3

    The Office

    Annapolis

    On Fri, Apr 5, 2013 at 8:45 AM, Michael Brown <m...@tkg.ca
    <mailto:m...@tkg.ca>> wrote:

    The white 3528 strips work well, good light output and low power.
    I have them glued and tie wrapped to a strip of high density foam
    board ( about 1/2" wide and 1/4" thick ) that is then screwed in
    place. The plastic cover on the strip proved a bit difficult to glue.

    Most of the strips have a power rating per meter, the ones I have
    are < 4.8 Watts / meter. They are also rated for 12V, but your boat
    may have 13.2 to 14.2 volts depending on you charging system. The
    LED are fairly sensitive to voltage and could be over driven.

    Add a constant current driver, a LED dimmer (also available on eBay)
    or a resistor in series. If you expect the highest voltage you will
    have on the boat will be 14.5v, then the resistor will need to drop
    2.5v at rated current.

    The strips I used where a bit under 2/3 of a meter, used about 3.2W
    at 12v so required 0.250 amps of current.

    To drop 2.5v at 0.250 amps you need a 10 ohm resistor
     ( Resistance in ohms = Volts / Amps ).
    The resistor will need to be rated for 0.625 watts so I used a
    1 watt resistor ( about $0.20 from Sayal ).
     ( Power in Watts  = Amps squared * Resistance )

    Adding the resistor will dim the LEDs slightly at 12V.

    For longer strips where the power to the resistor > 1 watt or
    were you want the best lighting power a constant current source
    is much better. Simple ones are only four components and cost
    less than $10 in parts. The dimmers from China are only $8!

    http://madscientisthut.com/wordpress/tag/led-current-control/


    Mike
    C&C 30
    Windburn




    > Hi All.
    >
    > I just volunteered my boat for a test case using these LED
    strip lights that are available on ebay cheap out of china. I
    haven't seen them used on boats before. They are marketed as
    being waterproof. There are a few variations on the LED types
    with the two most common being "SMD 5050" and "SMD 3528". The
    5050 have triple LEDs so they can be made into any colour, they
    are also brighter because of the triple LED and consume more. The
    3528, which I ordered, are smaller, single cell LEDs and consume
    less (why I chose them). Both varieties come in 5 meter lengths
    for about $20. The 3528 strip that I ordered has 600 LEDs on it!
    They can be cut to size. I purchased these to provide accent
    lighting in the cabin. They should be bright enough to be used as
    a primary light source for hanging out but not for reading (not
    the way I'm installing them, anyway).
    >
    > For the accent lighting I'll be installing them behind the teak
    trim on both sides of the boat just under the cabinets on either
    side. They should be hidden from view in there and I will likely
    aim them UP into that void rather than down, I'm a big fan of
    diffused lighting. I ordered the "natural white 4500k" LEDs. What
    I'm hoping to accomplish is a nice subdued ambient light in the
    cabin. I might even try a dimmer.
    >
    > If anyone is interested in this I can update once received and
    installed.
    > Check them out:
    >
    
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=310638125425&ssPageName=ADME:L:OC:CA:3160
    >
    > For $20 I figure it's worth the gamble. They are 12V DC so
    should be a snap to install.
    > I've got other ideas too. I'll see how this first strip works
    out and I'm curious to see what the real world power consumption is.
    >
    > Steve
    > C&C 32
    > Toronto

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-- Joel
    301 541 8551



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--
Cheers,
   Jeff Nelson
   Muir Caileag
   C&C 30


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