DustyShinigami wrote on 2025-09-03, 22:43:
wierd_w wrote on 2025-09-03, 22:27:Or, just make a small driver circuit board. […]
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Or, just make a small driver circuit board.
A 'reapplication' of a level shifter logic circuit would suffice.
Input signal is the motherboard HDD LED pulse.
'level shifted' output is the higher max current supplied with a voltage regulator and the 5v molex connector. (Say, diskette power rail.)
You can drive a shitload of LEDs that way.
I have absolutely no idea how to go about doing that or where to even start. ^^;
A level shifter of this kind needs only be one direction, making it very simple.
You put the HDD LED's input signal on the collector of a transistor, which makes the transistor activate when the HDD LED is energized, and deactivate when it is not. You use a transistor that can handle a larger current flow then the HDD LED header can provide, so that you can drive the parallel HDD LEDs from the signal emitted from that transistor.
See also, here.
https://www.digikey.com/en/blog/logic-level-shifting-basics
Instead of a higher voltage source, you offer a higher current source. (Or, use higher voltage and run the LEDs in series, but meh.)
It's functionally the same kind of thing as a bus transceiver chip, and such a chip could probably be abused here, since we dont really care about isolating voltages, just the amount of charge, and in isolating the LED header from having to deal with so much drain. You can instead use the ground line from the floppy power connector.
Say, one of these 1 bit buffers. You can get 10 of them on a reel of tape for cheap.
https://www.digikey.com/en/products/detail/te … 1G07DCKR/432005