Today, I decided to overdrive a star white LED I have with my adjustable power supply.
I extracted this LED from a little cheap flashlight, And it is a 1 watt.
It has no heat sink, But the metal plate is enough.
Here is the order of things happening:
1. Start at low power: 2.7 V .02 A, LED just glows.
2. Normal power: 3.7 V .33 A, LED is working normally, And is pretty bright.
3. Higher power: 4.0 V .6 A, LED is slightly brighter, No bad effects likely due to the little heat sinking.
4. Even more higher power: 6.0 V ? A(.8-1?): LED goes a light green! Would likely fail soon.
5. Very high power: 10 V 1 A, LED goes blue!(Phosphor likely changed, Or the blue LED chip is overpowering the phosphor, Causing a blue tint) Failure is coming.
6. Extremely high power: ? V 1 A, LED quickly burns up, Will never emit light again.
7. Highest power: 30 V 0 A, Power supply finishes off LED, exposing it to 8 times the normal voltage, Does not light up, Or have any current draw.
Goes to show how picky LEDs can be about power and heat sinking.
The LED has lots of pops, Blotches, Burns, And more.