LEDS in parallel
Wiring LEDS in parallel is a bit more complicated and you need more wires because each LED has to be connected to the positive and negative. In parallel circuits all of the LEDs receive the same voltage and the current is divided between the LEDs.This the opposite of series circuits.
You also still need current limiting resistors.In parallel circuits each LED should have its own resistor .You may be tempted to just put one current limiting resistor like in the series circuit.It may work, but you will get current fluctuations between the LED and varying brightness of the individual LEDs.
The main benefit of the parallel circuit is you can have many more LEDs than with a series circuit. Since we are dividing current and each LED only draws 20ma we can potentially add far more LEDS. Even if you use a 9V battery with 750maH current rating you could power 37 LEDs for 1 one hour (750mah/20ma).
In some large models you may have several dozen LEDs and/or LED strips.You may not have enough current for all of these LEDs.In this situation you can use a circuit called an LED driver board.LED driver boards can manage hundreds of LEDs and they draw much less current than parallel circuits.
I almost always use LEDs is parallel for my lighting circuits.
I will be posting a video link to show some LEDs in action in the next few days
So that is enough theory.The next step is to start building some models with LED lighting.
The first model will be a very simple lighting kit for an MPC 22 inch Eagle II cockpit.
The next model will be a runabout from Star Trek:Deep Space 9. This model will have more LEDs, but there will only be LEDs, no circuitry
After that I will be building DS9 USS Defiant.This will have evne more LEDs and include some circuit boards for lighting effects.
Finally I will be building a half scale ET spaceship.This will have several dozen LED,LED strip, neopixels ,a motorized special effect and a sound board.This build will also include using microcontrollers to control the LEDs and LED driver boards for some much more complex sound and light effects.
darbyvet attached the following image(s):