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- Jul 23, 2011
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Quick preface as this is a follow up to a 6 year old thread started by chriscraft254 and I wont be the guy to post in an old thread
https://forums.iboats.com/forum/boa...s/557605-led-strip-lighting-ins-and-outs-info
just a follow up on my experience with the LED strip lighting
I installed resin coated RGB in the boat, did the water-proof (in the tube) RGBW lighting on the Tiki Bar, and some of the resin coated RGBW in the house for cabinet lighting.
for the most part, the boat light strips were protected, on the inside of the bulwark stowage bins and under a section of trim in the boat. the strips in the cabin were pushed into a section of poly tubing to act as a diffuser to remove some of the harshness.
the double sided tape originally supplied failed on the strip lights within a few outings. Maybe the Klus extrusions that bruceb58 used help this.
Florida heat and sun turned all my strip lighting yellow/opaque depending on which strip. this leads me to believe that the silicone (labeled as epoxy) coating may be different on each manufacturing lot. however for $10 a 16M strip, hard to complain. some of it is "gummy" and breaking down
Again, hoping the Klus extensions helped with this.
I had a few strip failures where i soldered the wires and the pad tore off the LED strip. the symptom would be one strip would go Green or Red. not sure much can be done with this as even the factory solder joint on some of the strips failed.
I found that if the power is cycled rapidly, the LED controller will change color or go to one of the fade programs. that was a funky, but repeatable issue worth a laugh or three
every strip I cut had the ends siliconed and then covered with white epoxy lined shrink wrap. this helped with moisture damage, however the resin on the strips is failing and the factory soldered end wasnt epoxy lined shrink wrap.
the Tiki Bar has gone thru a few strips as they simply failed. these are full, non-cut strips. i suspect quality control issues as it usually is half a strip going out (all channels)
the ones in the kitchen are still looking good, however I have not climbed up to the ceiling to pull the access panel to get a look to see if the resin is breaking down.
I originally simply made up small brushed stainless channels for the boat for the LED strips to be glued into.
now that I am 3/4 of the way thru a hull re-paint and interior refresh, I would like to revisit LED strip lighting from those that installed it back in 2012. Specifically with Bruce and his Pontoon installation, and anyone else that has had good experience in a sheathed application. the other alternative is the yacht lighting we use at work, however that is $37 a Meter and not RGB (only 2700k and 5200k white)
or simply going with a few of the yacht step lights mounted in a few strategic locations.
chriscraft254 , bruceb58 Struc , lil buggy , MWBoatFan , FisherDan ,
https://forums.iboats.com/forum/boa...s/557605-led-strip-lighting-ins-and-outs-info
just a follow up on my experience with the LED strip lighting
I installed resin coated RGB in the boat, did the water-proof (in the tube) RGBW lighting on the Tiki Bar, and some of the resin coated RGBW in the house for cabinet lighting.
for the most part, the boat light strips were protected, on the inside of the bulwark stowage bins and under a section of trim in the boat. the strips in the cabin were pushed into a section of poly tubing to act as a diffuser to remove some of the harshness.
the double sided tape originally supplied failed on the strip lights within a few outings. Maybe the Klus extrusions that bruceb58 used help this.
Florida heat and sun turned all my strip lighting yellow/opaque depending on which strip. this leads me to believe that the silicone (labeled as epoxy) coating may be different on each manufacturing lot. however for $10 a 16M strip, hard to complain. some of it is "gummy" and breaking down
Again, hoping the Klus extensions helped with this.
I had a few strip failures where i soldered the wires and the pad tore off the LED strip. the symptom would be one strip would go Green or Red. not sure much can be done with this as even the factory solder joint on some of the strips failed.
I found that if the power is cycled rapidly, the LED controller will change color or go to one of the fade programs. that was a funky, but repeatable issue worth a laugh or three
every strip I cut had the ends siliconed and then covered with white epoxy lined shrink wrap. this helped with moisture damage, however the resin on the strips is failing and the factory soldered end wasnt epoxy lined shrink wrap.
the Tiki Bar has gone thru a few strips as they simply failed. these are full, non-cut strips. i suspect quality control issues as it usually is half a strip going out (all channels)
the ones in the kitchen are still looking good, however I have not climbed up to the ceiling to pull the access panel to get a look to see if the resin is breaking down.
I originally simply made up small brushed stainless channels for the boat for the LED strips to be glued into.
now that I am 3/4 of the way thru a hull re-paint and interior refresh, I would like to revisit LED strip lighting from those that installed it back in 2012. Specifically with Bruce and his Pontoon installation, and anyone else that has had good experience in a sheathed application. the other alternative is the yacht lighting we use at work, however that is $37 a Meter and not RGB (only 2700k and 5200k white)
or simply going with a few of the yacht step lights mounted in a few strategic locations.
chriscraft254 , bruceb58 Struc , lil buggy , MWBoatFan , FisherDan ,