This tutorial covers wiring up any old LED strip to your computer's power supply in a number of ways, but also to an independent power supply for use outside your case or on the back of your monitor or something else.
First of all if you can't be bothered with all this faffing about with bits of wire, connectors and the potential to damage your power supply or PC then you should really be looking at OcUKs extensive range of LED strips, which come with modular connectors that can be connected together to create full case lighting.
http://www.overclockers.co.uk/productlist.php?groupid=701&catid=1428&subid=1430&rows=0
Anything you decide to do with LED strips from this guide is your responsibility. I accept no responsibility for anything you do so don't even think of blaming me for something you've done wrong. None of the voltages inside a PC case (PSU excluded) can actually hurt you.
Things you will need:-
1) Some sort of mating half for a PSU or motherboard connector. eg Molex, fan connector.
2) A soldering iron, and some flux cored solder
3) Heatshrink
4) Something to cut and strip with. A pair of wire cutters, knife or scissors will do.
If you don't have a soldering iron or heatshrink then you can twist wires together and cover them with insulation tape in a colour of your choice. It's not a permanent solution and may come undone at some stage but it's better than nothing.
So what is a LED strip anyway?
A LED strip is a string of small Light Emitting Diodes, usually surface mounted onto a long thin strip of flexible plastic material. The LEDs themselves are semi-conductors that produce coloured light when a current flows through them. LEDs are one way devices, meaning that if you wire it up wrong nothing happens as current can only flow in onhe direction. If you wire it back to front it won't blow your PSU or motherboard, it'll just not work, which is a good thing I suppose if you fear for your components.
Here are a few different types of LED strip.
RGB 60 per metre
RGB 30 per metre
Some waterproof flexible one
And the cheapest type. 15 SMD per 30cm and waterproof. The LEDs are tiny little things but do produce some decent light.
Here is one lighting up a plate drawer, the spread of light is quite uniform and fills a lot of the space.
Unlike the official LED strips from the likes of Bitfenix the cheaper strips will often come without connectors and just have two bared ends. The problem here is how on earth do we get this connected up to our PC to give it the light giving voltage and current any LED needs?
There are a number of ways you can do this.
Use a molex extender, splitter thing.
Use an old fan cable and connector...
..use whatever this thing is..
..or this..
..even the connector of a long since binned Tri-cool would do the job.
So basically we can hack and chop up a Molex or a fan connector. Everyone has either a Molex or a fan connector available, if not here's one..
http://www.overclockers.co.uk/showproduct.php?prodid=CB-012-AK&groupid=1929&catid=153&subcat=
First up I hacked a Molex to Molex fan adapter cable, like the first pictured above and the one linked to for sale.
First off we need to cut the fan connector off
Then, strip the wires and tin them if you are using a soldering iron. Put some heatshrink on the wires here if you have any. The red wire will be your +12v wire and the black will be the 0v, or ground, or -ve if you prefer.
Some LED strips will come with two same colour wires, or maybe one will have a stripe. The one with the stripe will probably be your 'Red', usually anyway. If you wish to test polarity wire up your bared ends to a 9v PP3 battery. The terminals are marked + and - so you can easily work out which wire needs to go to the Yellow or Red on your Molex and which needs to go the black.
Now basically join the red and black wires together using the soldering iron, or if you dont have one just twist the wires together.
So you end up with something like this
The good thing about this method is that if you have two strips you can easily shove another Molex into the free end of the first and daisy chain them.
Next up we have the fan connector. Here's one I cut off a Xilence 80mm fan which I never used.
Same drill, strip the wires and tin them.
Bung some heatshrink on. I usually forget to do this and have to resolder but that's just the fun of doing stuff.
Same drill as before. Join red to red and black to black. Remove the yellow wire as much as possible.
So eventually once you shrink down the heatshrink it looks a bit like this.
And connect it up..
More to come....
First of all if you can't be bothered with all this faffing about with bits of wire, connectors and the potential to damage your power supply or PC then you should really be looking at OcUKs extensive range of LED strips, which come with modular connectors that can be connected together to create full case lighting.
http://www.overclockers.co.uk/productlist.php?groupid=701&catid=1428&subid=1430&rows=0
Anything you decide to do with LED strips from this guide is your responsibility. I accept no responsibility for anything you do so don't even think of blaming me for something you've done wrong. None of the voltages inside a PC case (PSU excluded) can actually hurt you.
Things you will need:-
1) Some sort of mating half for a PSU or motherboard connector. eg Molex, fan connector.
2) A soldering iron, and some flux cored solder
3) Heatshrink
4) Something to cut and strip with. A pair of wire cutters, knife or scissors will do.
If you don't have a soldering iron or heatshrink then you can twist wires together and cover them with insulation tape in a colour of your choice. It's not a permanent solution and may come undone at some stage but it's better than nothing.
So what is a LED strip anyway?
A LED strip is a string of small Light Emitting Diodes, usually surface mounted onto a long thin strip of flexible plastic material. The LEDs themselves are semi-conductors that produce coloured light when a current flows through them. LEDs are one way devices, meaning that if you wire it up wrong nothing happens as current can only flow in onhe direction. If you wire it back to front it won't blow your PSU or motherboard, it'll just not work, which is a good thing I suppose if you fear for your components.
Here are a few different types of LED strip.
RGB 60 per metre

RGB 30 per metre

Some waterproof flexible one

And the cheapest type. 15 SMD per 30cm and waterproof. The LEDs are tiny little things but do produce some decent light.

Here is one lighting up a plate drawer, the spread of light is quite uniform and fills a lot of the space.

Unlike the official LED strips from the likes of Bitfenix the cheaper strips will often come without connectors and just have two bared ends. The problem here is how on earth do we get this connected up to our PC to give it the light giving voltage and current any LED needs?
There are a number of ways you can do this.
Use a molex extender, splitter thing.

Use an old fan cable and connector...

..use whatever this thing is..

..or this..

..even the connector of a long since binned Tri-cool would do the job.

So basically we can hack and chop up a Molex or a fan connector. Everyone has either a Molex or a fan connector available, if not here's one..
http://www.overclockers.co.uk/showproduct.php?prodid=CB-012-AK&groupid=1929&catid=153&subcat=
First up I hacked a Molex to Molex fan adapter cable, like the first pictured above and the one linked to for sale.
First off we need to cut the fan connector off

Then, strip the wires and tin them if you are using a soldering iron. Put some heatshrink on the wires here if you have any. The red wire will be your +12v wire and the black will be the 0v, or ground, or -ve if you prefer.
Some LED strips will come with two same colour wires, or maybe one will have a stripe. The one with the stripe will probably be your 'Red', usually anyway. If you wish to test polarity wire up your bared ends to a 9v PP3 battery. The terminals are marked + and - so you can easily work out which wire needs to go to the Yellow or Red on your Molex and which needs to go the black.

Now basically join the red and black wires together using the soldering iron, or if you dont have one just twist the wires together.


So you end up with something like this

The good thing about this method is that if you have two strips you can easily shove another Molex into the free end of the first and daisy chain them.
Next up we have the fan connector. Here's one I cut off a Xilence 80mm fan which I never used.

Same drill, strip the wires and tin them.

Bung some heatshrink on. I usually forget to do this and have to resolder but that's just the fun of doing stuff.

Same drill as before. Join red to red and black to black. Remove the yellow wire as much as possible.


So eventually once you shrink down the heatshrink it looks a bit like this.

And connect it up..

More to come....
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