I’m not saying “do this” but what does anyone think?
There looks to me like there’s 4 circuits going out to strings of lights with a common return path (1,2,3,4 and C on the circuit board)
Would linking the 4 strings together cause them to all be in together whatever program is selected? (1+2+3+4) leaving C as return?
Or would doing that blow the chip and several other components?
The large red capacitors and power resistors suggests these are mains lights though not 24V?
Which is exactly how the OP wants them to work...Surely if you connect them all together then they would all be on together?
Which is exactly how the OP wants them to work...
Freddo, we don’t know for sure just taking op’s word it’s 24v. I assume there’s a plug in adaptor.
I think it’s quite an old set of lights looking at the size of components.
it might be that the 4 outputs each serve all the lights. 1 for constant, 1 for flashing, 1 for sequencing. etc. if so he needs to know which does what and mod the connections accordingly.
Yes, but he wants all lights to be permanently on, which should be possible.The first two answers given are almost certainly correct - the patterns are pre-programmed into the dedicated chip and can't be changed. The four driver transistors on the bottom end of the PCB will be driving LED groups on the output string, but the sequence is down to the embedded controller. Any changes the OP could make would just break the lights - none of the outputs will on their own force a pattern change embedded in the controller.
Buy new lights...
The four power transistors on the lowest part of the PC will provide the current source for each of the LED groups, driven in turn by the smaller transistors immediately behind the power transistors. These in turn will connect to the dedicated controller, which is not something that can be bypassed.
Attempting to drive the LEDs directly by some means that bypasses their dedicated (very simple!) drive circuitry is just going to lead to disappointment. If the four groups are disconnected and wired up outside of the dedicated controller, how would the OP do so? The max current for the LED groups is unknown, their colour or positional grouping is unknown, whether the groups are in series or parallel or a combination of both is unknown and so on. I'm all for experimentation, but in this case I think a good outcome is very, very unlikely.
It might be worth measuring the voltage coming in on AC, and the voltage going out on each of the 4 channels... (between 1 and C, 2 and C etc) when the program chip is set to static on.
If its the same, then just cut the controller out and replace with a joint.
Sorry Little Spark - this is just not going to work. LEDs are not like filament lamps; they are current-driven DC semiconductors which have to be driven from a current-limited source (approximated in simple DC single-LED circuits by a series resistor to provide a relatively constant current of, say 30mA at their voltage drop of 2.5V or thereby). LEDs are particularly sensitive to reverse-drive voltages and accordingly are never driven from AC voltage sources. The outcome will be for all of them to go pop simultaneously.
Seriously, don't try it.
In reality, the right value of current limiting resistor (1 per output) will probably do it.