I’m working on a long-run LED strip installation (think 20–50 meters) and I’m trying to keep brightness and color consistent end-to-end. On typical constant-voltage strips, the far end dims and “white” shifts, and under high load I sometimes see flicker.
So far I’ve tried the usual: higher voltage rails (e.g., 24V), thicker feeder wires, cleaner connectors, and power injection. It helps, but I’m curious what approaches people here consider “best practice” for reliability and serviceability.
Questions:
For long runs, do you prefer distributed power injection vs multiple smaller PSUs vs a higher-voltage backbone + local regulation?
Have you had good results with constant-current strips or per-segment regulation to reduce voltage-drop artifacts?
For addressable strips (WS281x/SPI/DMX), what are your go-to fixes for signal integrity over distance (grounding, buffering, differential, level shifting)?
Any rules of thumb for wire gauge, injection spacing, and PSU headroom that have held up in real installs?
I’m not looking for product recommendations as much as engineering patterns that scale and don’t become a maintenance nightmare. Would love to hear what’s worked (and what didn’t).
If you need NEC class 2, both Lutron and ERP make UL listed 24V class 2 supplies. You can calculate what length you can drive at 4A (96W) and drive that much. The Lutron one dims and the ERP does not, but you can chain an eldoLED or other “dimmer” between the ERP supply and the strip with excellent results. There is no perceptible flicker with either of these, and IIRC both Lutron and eldoLED even claim IEEE1789 compliance. (At least the Lutron one does leave sort of perceptible spots when dimmed when you saccade perpendicular to it, and you need to go to rather high frequency to avoid this. Of course, this is a nonissue at 100% duty cycle.). I have used both of these with strips from different power supplies butted up to each other with no perceptible brightness mismatch.
48V strips are a thing.
If you don’t need NEC class 2, you could try a much larger DC supply. You might consider circuit breakers to protect individual segments and wires. DIN-rail thermal-magnetic breakers rated for more than 24VDC are cheap, but they will buzz horribly if you apply PWM to them.
You’d be on your own in regard to regulation, but I bet most “120V driverless” strips work just fine at 120 times sqrt(2) DC volts, and they won’t flicker. You will get more than the design output and more heat, but no flicker. Test first and take appropriate care for safety.
Don’t use “driverless” strips with sine wave input. The 120Hz flicker is horrible.
Some LED strips contain internal constant current limiters that will give a roughly constant output across a (small) range of voltages. This may help.
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