If you plug it it in, if it doesn't light it's the wrong way round. Although these other two are more 'conventional': -The negative wire is closest to a small flat 'spot' on the LED's base. -The longer leg is the positive wire
Warm led is about 3000K and cold led is 5000-6000K
yes
That depends on the LED in question
Impedes blood flow to & from leg ... so you might lose that leg. Also, if the clot breaks loose it can interfere with systemic or pulmonary circulation - in which case you might die.
leg godt is a short for a toy at the name of LEGO as you can see where you get the name from: LEg GOdt leg godt translates to play good
Cathode (negative) is the shortest leg and there is a flat edge on the base of the LED, and it must be connected to the negative wire or "-" connection. Anode (positive) is the longest leg, and must be connected to the positive wire or "+" connection, as electricity will only pass through a LED from positive to negative.
The longest leg is the positive leg of any LED.
On an LED, one leg will be shorter than the other. The shorter leg is the negative polarity.
the negative leg is shorter than the positive leg.
Short leg= hypotenuse/2 hypotenuse= short leg*2 long leg= short leg * the square root of 3
because the negative leg is shorter.
Because if the shorter leg was shorter than the longer leg was long, then the longer leg wouldn't be longer than the shorter leg is short. The short leg would be the longer one rather than the long one being the short one.
annode
annode
Cut your leg short.
90