It would be better to separate the brake circuit from the side circuit, why not have 50% of the LED's for the side circuit and the rest for the brake.
Don't think you can get LED's that are dual brightness.
It would be better to separate the brake circuit from the side circuit, why not have 50% of the LED's for the side circuit and the rest for the brake.
Don't think you can get LED's that are dual brightness.
Or a simpler solution would be to put a diode in circuit so that when the sidelights are required only a few of the LEDs light up but all of them do when the brakelight is required and get rid of the resistor in sidelight feed
yes you can,,, commonly used,,,have em in mine, the little square uns, 4 terminals![]()

When you say it wont work - what have you done to test it? have you mocked it up on a bit of breadboard for testing?
I agree with the comments above - I would completely separate the brake and tail circuits. Your LED's do not show the polarity in your diagram, Just confirm that the contacts in the bulb holder aren't the wrong way around (shouldn't be otherwise you would end up earthing through the other circuit filament)
If you have ABS you will need to simulate the current drawn by a bulb as the ABS ECU monitors the brake light circuit - hence you may need a power resistor in parallel with the brake circuit (The LED probably wouldn't be able to pass enough current (I think the bulbs are 30W - ish)
You can buy drop-in replacements in a bulb holder rather than making up your own circuit - Or Nippy Normans has a sale on with LED tail lights for 1150GS's (Bought one myself a couple of days back)
See : http://www.lunaraccents.com/LED-taillight-circuit.html

yes you can,,, commonly used,,,have em in mine, the little square uns, 4 terminals![]()
What do you connect to the 4 terminals?
Hi Guys I know this is an older post but if this has not been sorted out let me know as I have a VERY simple soloution. I do this for a living and will be happy to help.
The reason your Schematic has partly failed is because you are linking the Brake and Rear light together, But more importantly is, if your lights are off, and you put your brakes on the power will go back through the wiring and will power your front lights too.
Keep your LEDs in 3s they are easier to control the brightness, I have edited your schematic but without the spec of your LEDs I can not tell you what size resistors to use, give me this info and i'll tell you the exact resistor size you need.
The Diode in that position will stop the brake light interfering with your normal lights.
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