I also looked at Taylor's board and a few things stand out between the two. Yes his board is much smaller, but you need external components for voltage adjust. Mine is on board with a 2mm pot for adjustment in the range of the selected voltage. I.E. 100 to 50 or 150 to 200. his enable is either on or off, mine is driving some HV transistors so you can vary the enable to achieve a "glowing/fading" effect. his does go lower in voltage- from 2 volts, but i cant see driving it that low. mine works well from 9-16v. I guess the biggest feature for mine is the pwm feature. And that it's an all in one solution. drop it in the breadboard or design it into your circuit. More work will definitely need to be done to get some hard specs. I need to build a few more to play with. right now i have 1.
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