Could you explain DC power with a wall wart can I go that route?alienfarts687 wrote: ↑Tue May 29, 2018 9:06 amI just saw these kits from Meiju on Alibaba, and it looks like you can use that dimmer somehow. It hooks up to the leads from the driver on one end, but the photo doesn't show where the other end goes. Maybe it's to 240v mains to power the device? If that's the case, I would advise extreme caution if you want to attempt wiring that remote dimmer. I don't know they wouldn't just use DC power with a wall wart. That would be far simpler and safer for consumers.
HLD driver help wiring the dimmer
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If it's wired for AC power, you can't just plug a DC wall wart into it. It depends on how they designed the dimmer, but I thought I saw 110vac markings on the picture above. Trying to hack it to use DC power wouldn't be trivial, and it would kind of defeat the purpose of making this dimmer "safe" since you'd have to mess around with mains voltage anyway.F.N. led wrote: ↑Tue May 29, 2018 8:57 pmCould you explain DC power with a wall wart can I go that route?alienfarts687 wrote: ↑Tue May 29, 2018 9:06 amI just saw these kits from Meiju on Alibaba, and it looks like you can use that dimmer somehow. It hooks up to the leads from the driver on one end, but the photo doesn't show where the other end goes. Maybe it's to 240v mains to power the device? If that's the case, I would advise extreme caution if you want to attempt wiring that remote dimmer. I don't know they wouldn't just use DC power with a wall wart. That would be far simpler and safer for consumers.
If you do want to use one of these dimmers though, for the love of God put it in a well-protected project box. The thought of a mains transformer exposed like that sends shivers down my spine.