- Dec 8, 2003
- 12,696
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I'm modifying my mouse to replace the red LED with a blue one. I put the new blue one across the leads of the old red one, and it was very very dim. Probing with it on other areas of the boards allows for full brightness, but too much if I just use VCC and GND- overheats. The LED is 3.3v IIRC, not 5v. Through looking at traces and probing a bit, I've found that there's an inline transistor(Not sure on the term- small three-contact part, only two being used- straight through) that causes the dimness, I'm not sure if its dropping the voltage or limiting current. I'm assuming that this is done to keep the bright LED dim. However, my blue LED is way too dim with what they're giving to the red one normally.
Would it be safe to remove the transistor to allow the 5v LED to operate at capacity? I know the mouse changes the brightness kind of in an analog format (Take the mouse off the surface, and it out it back near it and it gets real bright in an attempt to pick up the signal from the surface) but even then it's in 'bright mode' you can barely tell that the blue LED is on. The blue LED seems to operate well when I manually bypass the transistor, not overheating or anything. Is it safe to perma-bypass it or remove it altogether?
Please advise.
Would it be safe to remove the transistor to allow the 5v LED to operate at capacity? I know the mouse changes the brightness kind of in an analog format (Take the mouse off the surface, and it out it back near it and it gets real bright in an attempt to pick up the signal from the surface) but even then it's in 'bright mode' you can barely tell that the blue LED is on. The blue LED seems to operate well when I manually bypass the transistor, not overheating or anything. Is it safe to perma-bypass it or remove it altogether?
Please advise.