J_C
Explorer Addict
- Joined
- July 30, 2009
- Messages
- 6,572
- Reaction score
- 2,365
- City, State
- Florence, KY
- Year, Model & Trim Level
- 1998 XLT 4WD 4.0L SOHC
I've swapped regular incandescent for LED in my two Explorers (15 and 22) using FORScan and never had any burn out. As you know they are not the usual filaments - as the name says they are light emitting diodes which draw such a small current and they will last a very long time.
That's great, but every year you run them, the clock is ticking. It's better to have a warning when they fail, is all I'm really suggesting.
Even so, that's only part of the issue. If you take a mere 30mA LED, and give it 30mA without proper heatsinking, it will burn out in a few hundred hours or less. It's how hot the die gets, or on those with an integrated driver, also how hot it gets.
In a typical automotive application, the only way to make the LED bulb last longer than the "long life" incandescent equivalent, is to drive it at low enough current that it doesn't produce as much light, or to abandon the stock bulb form factor and connector, hack out a backplate heatsink like OEM LED lights, or use a larger form factor LED bulb and matching socket.