tim292stro
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The heat won't melt the epoxy until it burns the plastic, FR4 circuit board and melts all of the solder. Those look like red piranha-style LEDs, good news there is that they are CHEAP (in all senses of the word unfortunately).
One good thing is that optical epoxy is REPAIRABLE - in other words, cut it out and when you pour new epoxy in there to seal it the new epoxy will fill the voids in your cuts and make it look almost like new. The bad news is the construction of the fixture itself I'll bet they are ultrasonically welded together after epoxy potting - in this process, the two halves are held together under pressure and one side is attached to an ultrasonic transducer which vibrates the one half until the plastic edges in contact heat up and melt together. This is what I being done with modern plastic headlights and complex tail light fixtures.
The other downer I see is that in addition to the cheap through-hole LEDs and resistors, I don't see any TVS diodes or voltage regulation on the Printed Circuit Board (PCB). I'm guessing they crammed that stuff in the bump on the back where the cables come out. You can see though in your pictures that the LEDS for the tail light seem to be in 3-LED series strings, with one current limiting resistor for each series string, this means they (Trucklite) designed the LED PCB for about 6Volts (each LED is about 2V-fwd), and use regulation to step down the voltage to the string voltage.
This also suggests that the LEDs are probably fine, and it's the step-down regulation in the back of the fixture that is bad - and may mean that you can salvage some without affecting the outward appearance of the fixture (i.e.: you can cut out and replace the regulator assembly with a new one). Try cutting off the back of the one you already cut open, and see of you can carve out the regulation circuits. Do you (or your friend) have a bench power supply? I'd offer to help fix these but I just don't have the time (sorry), but I'm willing to arm-chair it .
[Edit:] I would have built these differently, I would have used a flexible circuit board, so that vibration wouldn't slowly crack the PCB and make the lights flicker. Also, if it turns out they never put in TVS diodes on the input wires, that will allow spikes to slowly (or very quickly) burn out the regulator - which I'm guessing was only rated for 30-34VDC (in 12VDC electrical systems it is common to find 50V rates parts due to spikes, so for 24VDC I'd expect to see 80-100V rated parts). [/Edit]
One good thing is that optical epoxy is REPAIRABLE - in other words, cut it out and when you pour new epoxy in there to seal it the new epoxy will fill the voids in your cuts and make it look almost like new. The bad news is the construction of the fixture itself I'll bet they are ultrasonically welded together after epoxy potting - in this process, the two halves are held together under pressure and one side is attached to an ultrasonic transducer which vibrates the one half until the plastic edges in contact heat up and melt together. This is what I being done with modern plastic headlights and complex tail light fixtures.
The other downer I see is that in addition to the cheap through-hole LEDs and resistors, I don't see any TVS diodes or voltage regulation on the Printed Circuit Board (PCB). I'm guessing they crammed that stuff in the bump on the back where the cables come out. You can see though in your pictures that the LEDS for the tail light seem to be in 3-LED series strings, with one current limiting resistor for each series string, this means they (Trucklite) designed the LED PCB for about 6Volts (each LED is about 2V-fwd), and use regulation to step down the voltage to the string voltage.
This also suggests that the LEDs are probably fine, and it's the step-down regulation in the back of the fixture that is bad - and may mean that you can salvage some without affecting the outward appearance of the fixture (i.e.: you can cut out and replace the regulator assembly with a new one). Try cutting off the back of the one you already cut open, and see of you can carve out the regulation circuits. Do you (or your friend) have a bench power supply? I'd offer to help fix these but I just don't have the time (sorry), but I'm willing to arm-chair it .
[Edit:] I would have built these differently, I would have used a flexible circuit board, so that vibration wouldn't slowly crack the PCB and make the lights flicker. Also, if it turns out they never put in TVS diodes on the input wires, that will allow spikes to slowly (or very quickly) burn out the regulator - which I'm guessing was only rated for 30-34VDC (in 12VDC electrical systems it is common to find 50V rates parts due to spikes, so for 24VDC I'd expect to see 80-100V rated parts). [/Edit]
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