a simple resistor.... and ohms law to work out what value resistor you will need.
have a go at this.... (dont forget that LEDS only work one way round, and a resistor value close to the required will be fine, it does
not have to be EXACT)
A bright orange LED might have these specs: voltage drop of 2.2V and a current of 75 milliamps (ie
0.075 amps).
From Ohms Law above, ohms = voltage drop (across the resistor) divided by amps
If we are supply 12V, and we only want 2.2V at the LED, we want the resistor to drop (12V – 2.2V =)
9.8V.
So, ohms of the required resistor =
9.8V divided by
0.075 amps (the required current flow through the LED)
9.8 divided by 0.075 =
131 ohms.
Therefore a 131 ohm resistor will limit the current flow to 0.075 amps through the LED.
The other spec of a resistor is its required power dissipation in watts.
Watts = amps x volts, so that’s 0.075 amps x the voltage drop across the resistor, which is 9.8V.
Watts = 0.075 x 9.8V =
0.7 watts.
So we’ve worked out we need a resistor with 131 ohms of resistance and a power handling of 0.7 watts. The nearest off-the-shelf design to this is a spec of 120 ohms and 1 watt.
(However, with a running car voltage that is higher than the nominal 12V, and with the fact that you probably don't want a dashboard monitoring LED to be super-bright, a 620 ohm, 1 watt resistor will drop LED current and still result in a LED bright enough to be easily seen.)
Taken from this article
http://autospeed.com/cms/A_110894/printArticle.html
hope it helps