"I then tin the wire and trim the surplus 5mm from the end of the wire so it's the correct length ready for soldering". Not sure what you mean by this?
There's a
good video on YouTube which explains the "tinning" technique very well.
I would also scrape the pins clean and tin them first
before soldering the tinned wire to to the pin as this tends to produce a better joint.
and.... As for wire thickness I need thick wires for the battery side (54v)of the convertor before the step down?? don't I ??
No, you don't need thick wires on the battery side, the battery is only supplying around 0.5 Amp to the converter, even though your light will be drawing nearer 2 Amps from it.
Your combined front and rear lights will require approx 15 Watts of power on the full brightness setting.
As Volts x Amps = Watts, 7.5 Volts x 2 Amps = 15 Watts.
If your converter is only 85-90% efficient, it will require ~11-18% more power than it will actually supply to allow for the inevitable losses caused by its 85-90% efficiency.
So, ~18 Watts will be required from the battery on the full brightness setting at 85% efficiency.
If we rearrange the above formula we end up with: Watts ÷ Volts = Amps
Now let's try that formula out with some real data:
- For a fully charged battery: 18 Watts ÷ 54 Volts = 0.334 Amps (334mA)
- For a fully depleted battery: 18 Watts ÷ 42 Volts = 0.429 Amps (429mA)
In either case, the maximum current on the battery side is still going to be less than half an Amp! Therefore, a thick wire is not required.
I hope this hasn't confused you too much
Alan