Hello rurikvan
As already told in some places in this forum
,
it's dangerous to operate leds without resistors
.
Leds are basically diodes, not light bulbs (which are basically resistors).
A led doesn't have a linear voltage/current ratio, so you can't just "guess" the current in your led from the voltage you put on its leads.
You need to use a voltage/current graph, and :
- it's specific to each diode model
- it has a rather steep curve
So a small voltage variation can lead to a big current variation, if current isn't limited by something.
This something is your resistor
Since the resistor will drop your voltage value, seen from the led side, you need to have a power supply voltage a bit higher than the total led voltage drop of your setting.
BTW : don't worry and use the led wizard, its easy and works well. You'll find it on the website front page.
Cya