This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.
luma:products [2013/12/01 04:42] Ethan Zonca [Luma-1L-2.0] |
luma:products [2019/06/13 02:48] |
||
---|---|---|---|
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
- | ====== Luma Nodes ====== | ||
- | Luma nodes are serially-addressable high-power RGBW lights. They are networked on a RS485 bus, so modules can easily be daisy-chained and controlled. | ||
- | |||
- | ===== Current Models ===== | ||
- | ==== Luma-1L-R4.1 ==== | ||
- | {{: | ||
- | |||
- | Current model with onboard 1 10W RGBW LED and integrated heatsink. | ||
- | ==== Luma-3L-R4.1 [PRE-PRODUCTION] ==== | ||
- | Current model with 3 onboard 10W RGBW LEDs and integrated heatsink. | ||
- | ==== Luma-S-4.0 [PRE-PRODUCTION] ==== | ||
- | Current model for driving high-power RGB LED strips | ||
- | |||
- | ===== Obsolete Models ===== | ||
- | |||
- | ==== Luma-1L-4.0 ==== | ||
- | Initial 10W RGBW LED model with RJ45 and screw terminal connectors mounted on the top of the board (current models have these components on the bottom). This model adds 4 constant-current buck drivers for each LED channel, an on-board led, an on-board heatsink, a temperature sensor, and a crystal for clocking at 16MHz. | ||
- | ==== Luma-1L-3.0 ==== | ||
- | {{: | ||
- | |||
- | Luma board with an off-board LED driven with discrete transistors and surface-mount current-limiting resistors. This model adds reverse voltage protection, a transistor-controlled fan output, and better heat dissipation for current-limiting resistors. | ||
- | ==== Luma-1L-2.0 ==== | ||
- | |||
- | {{: | ||
- | |||
- | The first Luma board to communicate over RS485. Uses current-limiting resistors and transistors to drive an off-board LED. | ||
- | ==== Luma-1L-1.0 ==== | ||
- | |||
- | {{: | ||
- | |||
- | Intial Luma prototype, also known as TinyRGB. Communication over I2C using Cyz_RGB, an alternate firmware for BlinkM modules. |