Miniscope Board

General Category => Electronics => Topic started by: Jesper.vernooij on August 11, 2016, 08:51:02 PM

Title: Flickering excitation LED with longer coax cable
Post by: Jesper.vernooij on August 11, 2016, 08:51:02 PM
Hi Everyone,

We have recently build a new miniscope featuring a 4' (~1,21m) coax cable. All components work as they should but the excitation LED flickers in strength quite some. In addition, whenever we connect our older miniscopes, the LED shines a little bit on 0% excitation power. The new LED first turns on at 20% power. For a full image: the older working miniscopes feature roughly 1,5' (45cm) cables. Does anyone know if the length of the cable is a factor in excitation LED power output and stability? Or did I just do a bad job soldering?

Thanks!

Jesper
Title: Re: Flickering excitation LED with longer coax cable
Post by: MikerVee on August 12, 2016, 12:19:54 AM
We have 10 scopes in use with 3m coax cables. No problems with 9 of them.
Recently I replaced the LED on the 10th one because it was flickering and getting dimmer during a short period of operation. My guess is, the LED was degraded during the soldering process, maybe it got too hot. Some LEDs are very sensitive to that. Problem seems solved now.
Title: Re: Flickering excitation LED with longer coax cable
Post by: Daniel Aharoni on August 12, 2016, 03:24:37 AM
Hi Jesper,
If using the coax cable from Cooner Wire (or something similar) you should be able to run up to (and likely well over) 10' without issue. The source of the flickering LED is likely one of the following;
Title: Re: Flickering excitation LED with longer coax cable
Post by: Jesper.vernooij on August 12, 2016, 08:15:37 PM
Thanks for all the tips! I replaced the LED and everything works fine now. Must have indeed been damage from the solder job.