Help with damaged ring light
Added 2018-04-19 06:52:06 +0000 UTCHey guys,
I was wondering if any of you have more knowledge about this. The power supply of my ring light got fried , literally smoke came out of it. There are no screws so I cant open it and have to replace it.
Now I think it is 50W. BUT when I look on amazon I only find higher or lower than that. Do any of you know if this will work? https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B016MC67QU/?coliid=IV8SCQHYERS38&colid=3I35JMF98JZHF&psc=0&ref_=lv_ov_lig_dp_it
it is 90 W but I think it will.
Comments
hi rapunsel are your Russian?
2018-04-29 21:27:12 +0000 UTCok so I bought the adapter :P going to have to put it on 15V Will see if it works but I think it will :)
ASMR Rapunzel
2018-04-20 06:44:21 +0000 UTCYes to all of the above. Their website suggests that the output voltage of their adapter may be 9VDC? <a href="http://neewer.com/?s=Power+Adapter" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank">http://neewer.com/?s=Power+Adapter</a>
2018-04-19 14:23:03 +0000 UTCThe important thing is that the output voltage is the same as that needed by the lamp, in terms of power, if it is greater than the power of the lamp is not bad, it is even better, because the feeder will work more freely
Juan Ruiz
2018-04-19 12:36:22 +0000 UTCGood Luck & keep the tingles coming!
2018-04-19 12:30:07 +0000 UTCThese two guys are correct, but the other wrinkle is that rarely a manufacturer will swap the voltage on the inner & outer conductor. The light manufacturer should be able to tell you that too.
2018-04-19 12:29:40 +0000 UTCIt's very important that you select the same voltage as your ring light. If you select the wrong thing, you could damage the light itself (if it's not already damaged by the dodgy supply). It MIGHT not be an issue, depending on how it works, but (knowing nothing about it) it's probably an LED light and you don't really want to mess up the voltage into that. The amps is also important, but way less so. If the amps are too high there's no issue, but if they're too low then most likely the light just won't be as bright. Normally you can find the required voltage and current written on the lamp somewhere. If not the seller can almost certianly tell you. (You might be able to look it up online if you know the model number)
Sammy Gillespie
2018-04-19 11:21:14 +0000 UTCok thanks Jason :) Contacted the seller of my ring light just in case.
ASMR Rapunzel
2018-04-19 07:17:43 +0000 UTCReally the volts and amps are mostly the only thing to worry about. Seems that power supply has a lot of volt/amp options so it should work if it's the power supply that got fried.
Jason aka asmrpeople
2018-04-19 07:02:18 +0000 UTC