Thanks for the tips, the helps, and the videos for the assembly. I was able to swap the driver with Lume1 along with AUX board. I chose the resistors of 1.8K for Red and Blue and 5.6K for Green, the recommended values. I am happy with these values. The low level is very dim, almost like trit. The high is bright enough. I think the disadvantage with these values is the color mixing to obtain the color somewhere in between like yellow, violet, white, and so on. Those in-between colors are not defined well. I can see red and blue clearly for violet, for example.
Everything seems to be working. I have got several questions, but I will start with those next.
The AUX LED’s have the selections of R, Y, G, C, B, V, W, Rainbow, Volts. I am still learning, but my questions are about Volts. It looks like mine has two different selections for Volts, so it is like R, Y, G, C, B, V, W, Rainbow, Volts No. 1, Volts No. 2. Functionality-wise Volts No. 1 and Volts No. 2 are exactly the same. There are just two of the same selections. At least, that is what I am thinking. What am I doing wrong?
The next question is about Volts, too. When Volts is selected, the color goes to V (violet) regardless of the battery voltage. It does not matter if Volts is selected from OFF or Lockout. There is one more to this situation. Volts is selected with OFF. Then, the main LED’s are turned on. After turning off the main LED, Volts shows the correct color for a while. Eventually, it goes back to violet. It is almost like some capacitor needs to be charged for the Volts function. Indeed, the higher current is, the less duration the main LED’s need to be on to have the correct color. Is it supposed to be this way?
I am new to AUX board. This is the first one ever. I like it very much. I am still learning about it. Indeed, I did some searches, but I could not find the good information.
Hopefully, mine is not broken. I may have broken it during the assembly. It was challenging. What do you think?