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Making LED Lamp using Cellphone Charger

Last Updated on November 15, 2023 by Swagatam 100 Comments

A plug-in type powerful wall LED lamp can be built at home by using a few white LEDs and by powering it through a cell phone charger. The power from cell phone charger is around 6 volts at 500 mA approximately.

Why use a Cell Phone Charger

The supply from a cell phone charger may be well suited and can be tried for powering white LED lights. The application includes some important types like a LED tube light circuit, LED wall lamp circuit, LED porch light, LED table lamp etc. to name a few.

A discarded, spare cell phone charger and a few inexpensive LEDs are all that you want you make a simple yet powerful LED tube light. The cell phone charger can also be used for making a porch light, a bed room wall light or a table lamp. Full circuit schematic is enclosed here in.

A nice little wall mounted cool LED tube lamp circuit  can be built using a few number of white LEDs and s discarded AC mobile charger adapter.

The use of a cell phone charger makes the entire unit very compact and perfectly mountable on wall sockets.

Cell phone chargers are not new to us and nowadays we all seem to have a couple of in spare with us.

This may be mainly due to the reason that whenever a new cell phone is procured a charger comes free within the package with the handset.

These units are so long-lasting and rugged that most of the time chargers last more than the cell phones.

These spare cell phone chargers often lie idle and at some point of time we tend to dispose them off or simply discard them from our house.

For a lay man these units may be a piece of junk, but a technical individual might make a complete gem out of it.

Especially a person who may be an electronic hobbyist will very well know how valuable a cell phone charger can be even when it’s not being used for its actual intended purpose.

What are Cell Phone Chargers and How do they Function

We all have seen a cell phone charger working or rather being used for charging cell phones. Therefore we definitely know that it’s something to do with the supplying of some sort of power output.

That’s correct, these are actually a form of AC to DC adapters, however they are incredibly efficient as compared to an ordinary adapter which may employ a transformer for the required conversions.

Cell phone chargers are able to provide a nice six volts at a massive 800 mA of current. That’s quite big considering the size and the weight of these units.

Basically a cell phone charger is a high-grade SMPS power supply at the above rated level. Fortunately a white LED also works at potentials which quite matches with the above specs.

This prompted me to think of using a spare cell phone charger to be used as a plug-in type wall lamp.

Mind you one charger can provide enough power to support at least 30 odd numbers of high power high-efficiency white LEDs.

It simply means that the lights can be used as a compact LED tube light which can comfortably replace a common CFL light and generate light quite as good.

At no loads, a cell phone charger may provide outputs up to 10 volts, which can easily power a couple of LEDs in series.

The series will consume a minimum of 20 mA, however since the charger can supply a good 500 ma plus current we can add 15 more such series in parallel, making the total accommodation close to 30 or more LEDs.

Parts Required for the proposed cell phone charger LED tube light circuit

You will require the following parts for constructing the proposed project:

  • Series Resistors - All 68 Ohms, 1/4 Watt
  • An ordinary spare cell phone charger – 1no.
  • White LEDs – 30 nos. for making a small tube light or 10 LEDs for making a wall mounted bedroom lamp etc. (see text)
  • PCB – General purpose type or as per the project specifications.

Construction Clues

Constructing this LED wall lamp using cellphone charger is not difficult as it only requires the LEDs to be fixed in rows and columns correctly as shown in the diagram.

You may use the power from the cell phone to light any number if LEDs depending upon the requirement.

For example if you want to make a porch light for illuminating your house veranda, then probably you would need to assemble not more than 6 LEDs.

cellphone charger 4 LED lamp circuit

Making a Bedroom LED Light

For making a cool bedroom room lamp a single LED would suffice, instead of sitting in complete darkness, this light may be used or switched ON while watching TVs or videos.

For making a table lamp for reading purposes, a group of 10 LEDs would provide enough light for the purpose.

10 LED lamp using cellphone charger circuit diagram

And as discussed above, a descent LED tube light can also be built by assembling some 30 + LEDs in conjunction with a cell phone charger power supply.

cellphone charger 30 LED lamp circuit design

How to Solder the LEDs

For all the above applications, the basic mode of soldering and fixing the LEDs remains the same.

Fix and solder a series of two LEDs with a series current limiting resistor and now go on repeating this series as many times as you want, depending upon the type of lamp you are trying to build.

Once you finish assembling this layout, you may go joining all the free ends of the resistors which becomes one of the supply terminals, similarly join all the remaining free ends of the LEDs, which becomes the other supply terminal of the unit.

These supply inputs now just needs to be connected with the cell phone charger supply.

The LEDs should immediately come ON and produce illumination just as desired by you.

The assembly now needs to be housed appropriately inside a suitable plastic enclosure as per individual specification and liking.

A Simpler Design

A much simpler configuration can be seen below:

Since the optimal voltage/current from a standard charger is around 8V / 1 amp, having 2 LEDs in series, we can connect 61 of such series in parallel to get 8 watt output

16 LED lamp circuit schematic using mobile charger

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Filed Under: Lamps and Lights Tagged With: Cellphone, Charger, Lamp, LED, Making

About Swagatam

I am an electronics engineer and doing practical hands-on work from more than 15 years now. Building real circuits, testing them and also making PCB layouts by myself. I really love doing all these things like inventing something new, designing electronics and also helping other people like hobby guys who want to make their own cool circuits at home.

And that is the main reason why I started this website homemade-circuits.com, to share different types of circuit ideas..

If you are having any kind of doubt or question related to circuits then just write down your question in the comment box below, I am like always checking, so I guarantee I will reply you for sure!

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Reader Interactions

Comments

Kim Fernan Fusilero says:
September 8, 2021 at 8:05 pm

Can you help me with this? I cant compute how many incandescent mini lights i will use to power it in AC 220v.

Reply
Swagatam says:
September 9, 2021 at 8:31 pm

divide 220 with the incandescent lamp’s voltage rating. More info is give in the following article:

https://www.homemade-circuits.com/make-230-volts-bulb-string-lights-for/

Reply
Anurag says:
June 11, 2020 at 2:24 am

Hello Sir,

I have 42 white LED’S (each of 5mm) arranged on a single PCB (taken out from rechargeable lantern since lantern battery is dead). I have no idea about LED’S arranged in series or parallel.
and
I have Nokia charger of 5.7v and 800ma output. Can i light up that LED’S arrangement with Nokia charger ? Please guide.

Reply
Swagatam says:
June 11, 2020 at 12:26 pm

Hello Anurag, if the battery of the lantern was a 4V battery then certainly the LEDs are in parallel. Alternatively you can connect the NOKIA charger through a 100 ohm resistor, if the LEDs illuminate then they are in parallel and you can continue using the charger for powering the LEDs.

Reply
jhon says:
January 7, 2020 at 12:03 am

In one lamp I want 1 white led
White led 3w 3.2-3.5v 700mA

In other lamp I want 4 white led
White led 3w 3.2-3.5v 700mA

And in other lamp I want to conect 2 white 1 red and 1 blue led
White led 3w 3.2-3.5v 700mA
Blue led 3w 3.2-3.5v 700mA
Red led 3w 2.2-2.6V 700mA

Using independent power supply for eah lamp, Is it possible using a Cellphone Charger ?

Reply
Swagatam says:
January 7, 2020 at 9:25 am

If you are using separate chargers then it may be possible…

Reply
Olo says:
September 9, 2019 at 7:47 pm

Hi Swagatam,
I want to build a light with the help of a old Nokia mobile charger with approx 20 white led, 6 blue & 6 pink led. Kindly guide me the value of resistors to be used in this circuit.
Thanks

Reply
Swagatam says:
September 9, 2019 at 8:53 pm

Hi Olo, can you please specify the current specs of the LEDs? I’ll try to help!

Reply
olo says:
September 13, 2019 at 3:38 pm

i would be using a 5mm led with a fwd voltage of 3.2v

Reply
Swagatam says:
September 14, 2019 at 6:35 am

Make separate series/parallel groups of white, blue, and pink LEDs. White will have 10 strings in parallel, each string having 2 LEDs in series. Blue and pink will have 3 strings in parallel, each having 2 LEDs in series.

Connect separate resistor for these groups at their positive common ends. White will have 5 ohm 1 watt, blue and pink will have 16 ohms each.

Connect the end terminals of these resistor to the positive supply, and also join the negative ends of all the groups/strings together and connect to the negative supply

Reply
Olo says:
September 16, 2019 at 6:10 pm

Thanks Swagatam, that was really informative. Will try this and get back to you.

Reply
Swagatam says:
September 16, 2019 at 7:34 pm

My Pleasure olo!

Reply
bilal says:
March 28, 2019 at 3:25 am

I am facing a unique problem, I have 1.5V pink led , if i connect it two led in series and and use 3v power supply led glows, but if i connect it with mobile usb charger it doesnot glow, i found if i connec it with mobiel powers upply voltage drop against led is 3 volt , why is this happening
?

Reply
Swagatam says:
March 28, 2019 at 8:09 am

Mobile charger output will be 5V, so most probably the LEDs are by now damaged and are creating short circuit for the charger. With a mobile charger you must connect a series resistor with the LEDs. The calculations will be like this:

R = 5 – 3 / LED current

Reply
DEBASHIS BHATTACHARYYA says:
June 29, 2018 at 4:00 pm

Sir,
3 white LEDs were connected in series to a battery supply of 4.5 volts. If I want to connect it with mobile charger with 5 Volt 10A spefication, what will be value of resistor, to be connected with the circuit to get the optimum glow of LEDs.

Reply
DEBASHIS BHATTACHARYYA says:
July 2, 2018 at 11:11 am

Many thanks for your valuable information.

Reply
Swagatam says:
July 2, 2018 at 12:00 pm

you are welcome!

Reply
Swagatam says:
June 29, 2018 at 4:30 pm

Debasis, white LEDs are normally rated at 3.3V therefore 3 of them in series cannot light up with a 4.5V supply that’s impossible. Even with a cell phone charger you may be able to connect only 2 LEDs in series, 3 might not produce proper illumination.

With a 5V 10amp supply you could connect the 3 LeDs in parallel, and use a resistor in series with each of the LEDs. Assuming your LeDs are rated at 20mA each, the value of each resistor would be:

5 – 3.3 / .02 = 85 ohms 1/4 watt each

Reply
Ashish says:
December 27, 2016 at 7:05 pm

hi, I am using 2, 15 W bulbs (one red and one yellow) in the night lamp which is creating heating problem …Please suggest any workaround…Can i use red LEDs and one bright bulb in a night lamp…If yes, please tell me how can i do that with an old mobile charger…

Reply
Swagatam says:
December 28, 2016 at 6:52 am

did you mount the LeD on a heatsink, because all high watt LEDs will require heatsink for proper functioning without getting damaged.

you can use a single 20mA red LED also, with a limiting resistor…whose value can be calculated by the following formula

R = supply voltage – LED forward voltage / LED max current rating.

Reply
Jesse says:
November 28, 2016 at 2:12 am

Would this work with 100w chip? Resistor 100w?

Reply
Swagatam says:
November 28, 2016 at 11:39 am

absolutely not…cellphone charger output is just 15 watts

Reply
Jesse says:
November 28, 2016 at 1:42 am

I have a 4 x 100w led chip. Would this work using diagram above? And what resistor would i need?

Reply
The Rocking Time says:
July 31, 2016 at 5:17 am

sir
(1). in a CFL lamp circuit what is the voltage applied between the anode and cathode of the tube ( say output voltage from the circuit )

(2). What is actually happening in a cfl circuit ? is the final voltage given into the tube terminals AC or DC ?

(3). Can we make a portable inverter of less power ( say same as the CFL Power ) with that CFL circuit ?

(4). I am having an arrangement of 22 high brightness LEDs which can be directly plugged into an AC bulb holder.. I want to modify that bulb such that it should work with a rechargeable lesser voltage battery ( say 12 V or less ) .. So anyway to modify the cfl circuitry to make this possible ? collaborate the modified cfl circuit to glow my 230 V led lamp with battery ?

Reply
Swagatam says:
July 31, 2016 at 2:35 pm

RT,
The mains is converted to 330V DC and then converted into a 330V pulsating DC, this DC is applied across the tube.

CFL circuit cannot be used as an inverter

you can make a standard 12V, 100 watt inverter and use it to power your LEDs

Reply
The Rocking Time says:
July 29, 2016 at 6:49 pm

thank you very much sir

Reply
The Rocking Time says:
July 29, 2016 at 3:28 am

k sir… got it… thank you for this usefull information
. sir one more thing can a beginner like me who is having deep interests in doing DIY electronics projects be able to use a RASPBERRY PI computer to make the result possitive as expected ? Is it good enough for doing even high grade projects ?

I need your opinion about RASPERRY PI

Reply
Swagatam says:
July 29, 2016 at 4:13 pm

yes it is possible, but a prior basic knowledge of electronic component will be required….learning Arduino initially could be more beneficial.

Reply
The Rocking Time says:
July 28, 2016 at 3:33 pm

that is ok.. but if i am giving a voltage more than the total voltage drop, all the leds will glow together, not one after the other.. then how the cheap led light systems available in market works in such a manner that one arrow shaped led bunch travells from one place to an another .. without using many electronic components and dealing with 100s or 1000s of LEDs ?.. i am pretty sure a bunch of decade counter ics ( say CD4026 )is not a solution for these types of led arrays is there anything to be done with ceramic capacitors in these ?

Reply
Swagatam says:
July 29, 2016 at 3:15 am

LEDs can NEVER illuminate in a sequencing manner without an IC processor…..definitely it will require decade counters, it doesn't need to be in the form of 4022 of 4017, it could be in the form of embedded programmed micro chips, as normally used in all cheap Chinese ornamental LED sing lights.

Reply
The Rocking Time says:
July 28, 2016 at 5:01 am

Sir suppose 100 LEDs are connected in series ( +-+-+-………..-) now i need to transmit a bit ( say 1, high state ) through these leds.. so this will look like a collision transfer between succeeding atoms in a substance.. so could u please suggest a method by which i can implement this ? not using several decade counters but with a single ic or logic setup ?

Reply
Swagatam says:
July 28, 2016 at 11:17 am

RT, I am not very sure how a bit could be passed through a series of LEDs, however one thing can be assumed, that since the bit is also a voltage pulse its potential must be higher than the total forward drop of the LEDs, otherwise the "bit" might fail to reach the other end of the series.

Reply
punith 1243 says:
July 19, 2016 at 12:51 pm

Sir if i connect a nozzle to water pump outlet does it affects the efficiency of motor or does it damage the motor parts

Reply
Swagatam says:
July 20, 2016 at 2:53 am

This is not a circuit related question, so I have no idea about it.

Reply
punith 1243 says:
July 18, 2016 at 6:12 pm

I want to learn more could u give me u r mail id pls

Reply
Swagatam says:
July 19, 2016 at 8:06 am

you can ask your questions here, through comments….

Reply
punith 1243 says:
July 18, 2016 at 5:37 pm

Ok sir lets take 1w led and no resistor
Teach me to calculate the power consumption

Reply
Swagatam says:
July 19, 2016 at 8:05 am

Punith, you can use the following formula for calculating the resistor

R = (supply voltage VS – LED forward voltage VF) / LED current

Reply
punith 1243 says:
July 16, 2016 at 2:27 pm

Sir mobile charger may consume 3-7watt when its connected to mobile
But if led is connect then whats the power consumption

Reply
Swagatam says:
July 17, 2016 at 2:37 pm

Punith, it will depend on the LED spec and the resistor calculated for limiting the current for the LED

Reply
punith 1243 says:
July 16, 2016 at 2:25 pm

Sir how much power does your ckt comsumes

Reply
Sandeep Dawra says:
March 30, 2016 at 8:20 pm

Swagtam sir i have 1 watt led if i connectd that is very shining but very heat up when i use 68 ohm resistors light so dim which resistr use and how many led allow to connected thanks sir

Reply
Swagatam says:
March 31, 2016 at 5:45 am

Sandeep, try two in series without any resistor….if still it gets hot then you can add a 10 ohm resistor to reduce the heat.

Reply
Sandeep Dawra says:
March 30, 2016 at 8:13 pm

Sir namaste i have 1 watt led diode bulb how many led connected with 5v 500mah charger without heatsink plz help me thank i m wating for ur reply

Reply
Harsh Patel says:
March 14, 2016 at 4:12 pm

i have 1 amp charger and 40 led 1 watt how to arrange plz tell me

Reply
Harsh Patel says:
March 15, 2016 at 6:34 am

ok thanks sir

Reply
Swagatam says:
March 15, 2016 at 4:17 am

with 1 amp 12V only 3 LEDs can be illumunated

Reply
Swagatam says:
December 7, 2019 at 8:36 am

Hello Abdul, 100 in parallel would require 20 amps at 5 V which doesn’t appear to be a workable configuration. Instead you can use 4 LEDs in series and connect 25 such series in parallel, which would then require a manageable 12V 5 amp.

Reply
Abdul Basit Momin says:
December 7, 2019 at 1:26 am

Hello sir I want to run 100nos 8mm white leds in parallel ……..led have 3.3 v 0.2ma …..is their any smps for that which glow bright and work for a long period

Reply
Swagatam says:
August 24, 2015 at 4:04 am

the shown diagram is for 5mm 20mA LEDs….it's not for 1 watt LEDs.

if you connect 30 LEDs in parallel, each would run at around 130 mA…that;s far below the 350mA actual rating of the LEds…so the total output would be around just 0.13 x 30 = 4 watts

if it's not heating that indicates that it's not working at the specified power rating:)

Reply
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