In theory you can connect a LED with resistor backwards to the battery, nothing happens, so if you found which wire was positive when the truck is going in reverse, connect the wire, start backing up and the lights come on, then drive forward the lights wouldn't be on.
I did search the forums, even tried googling with mulitple different tries to find nothing, not even if the LED would fry??
so in thought, i found this from wikipedia
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LED#Electrical_polarity
I don't quite understand the breakdown voltage, but 9.6v is not that large, only 3x the vf. in Theory, you could use a resister on both negative and the positive right? I'm not sure, i have a few spare LEDs and wires sitting around, i guess i'll try it out tommorow when i get bored.
oh, the white LEDs i got are 2.2volts, with a 20 mA draw i'm using a 390 ohm 1/4th watt resistor. any info would be helpful, maybe we can brainstorm a easy workaround
I did search the forums, even tried googling with mulitple different tries to find nothing, not even if the LED would fry??
so in thought, i found this from wikipedia
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LED#Electrical_polarity
no current flows and no light is emitted if a small voltage is applied in the reverse direction. If the reverse voltage grows large enough to exceed the breakdown voltage, a large current flows and the LED may be damaged. If the reverse current is sufficiently limited to avoid damage, the reverse-conducting LED is a useful
I don't quite understand the breakdown voltage, but 9.6v is not that large, only 3x the vf. in Theory, you could use a resister on both negative and the positive right? I'm not sure, i have a few spare LEDs and wires sitting around, i guess i'll try it out tommorow when i get bored.
oh, the white LEDs i got are 2.2volts, with a 20 mA draw i'm using a 390 ohm 1/4th watt resistor. any info would be helpful, maybe we can brainstorm a easy workaround