This blog post also answers the question: What is rectification and why is it important?
Short Answer:
Your LED Christmas lights are flickering because they aren’t built with inline rectifiers. These full-wave rectifier circuits (diode bridges) flip the lower half of the input electrical waveform which results in a higher rate of flicker that virtually disappears to the naked eye.
All of the Christmas Light Source LED Light strings are built with a rectifier at the beginning of the string and again at the center of the light set to minimize flicker.Â
Long Answer:
First, the disclaimer. This blog post is not a treatise on electrical power generation and rectification circuitry. We’re publishing this discussion for folks who just want to know that flicker is a “side-effect” of the way their electricity is delivered and how inline rectifiers help reduce headache-inducing flicker on their Christmas trees.
(Constructive comments will always be welcome, it’s been a few years since any of us made a nice, shiny solder joint on a circuit board. But then again, does anyone do that anymore?)
Your Christmas lights flicker because they aren’t traditional incandescent lights that create lights based on heating a small wire element in the presence of an inert gas inside the little glass bulbs. Light from LEDs are generated in a much more complicated way and involve valence bands of energy and lots of science. We’ll explore this in great detail another day when we’re feeling super geeky.
In a nutshell, we can represent the voltage change over time of the AC coming out of your household outlet like this where this is a rough graph of voltage vs. time.
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In order to create a DC input waveform to the LED Christmas light string, a cheap string will just clip off the bottom part of the waveform. This is what creates a flickering, choppy light result especially when the light string is moving.
Here’s what that looks like.
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Nicely engineered light strings have a diode bridge that flip the input waveform instead of clipping it off. LIke this.
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You can see that an approximate average of the waveform when the bottom is flipped is much smoother than if you clip off the bottom half of the input.
Which means you have a higher waveform frequency so it’s less visible to the human eye.
At Christmas Light Source, our light strings have full wave rectifiers at the beginning, end and in some strings a third rectifier located in the middle of the light string. This results in very low flicker and a fantastic quality of light.
Here’s what those rectifiers look like:
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I’m going to take this knowledge a step further, if the moderator allows me to.
Even though my 70 lamp led white string it has two diodes (those green thing-ma-bobs) in it it is strictly a half wave string. with a analog meter I determined the AC load for string is 10 milliamps. fed from a full wave diode bridge ( for those of you are deep electronic guys and girls) the current will increase to 20 milliamps as expected. Barely discernible flicker. Research into white LEDs tells me 3.5/20 milliampers each is average. Will this string handle 20 millampers?I’m thinking of adding a voltage dropping resistor and adding a filtering capacitor And have no detectable 120 Hz flicker at all!
Does anyone make Christmas lights that either run on smoothed DC or use hf drivers (in KHz)? I find flicker uncomfortable so use either HF lamps (or incandescent where thermal inertia is your friend!)
Not that I know of.
Your best option at this time is a well designed, well-filtered string of LED lights. No LED light string is completely flicker-free but they are much better than they were 10+ years ago. Look for strings that have filters near the male plug and a second filter at the middle of the string.
Sorry I couldn’t help you with your quest.