I've wired LED's before, like one or 2, really basic stuff. I'm working on a project where I need 8 LED's (4 red, 4 blue) to be operated by the same switch. If possible.
I'd like to be able to have 3 selections, either the red, or the blue, or both at the same time. There will be a main switch that turns the whole setup on or off.
Also it has to run on batteries, which have to fit within the project. 4 double A's are probably the most I can fit with a single power source though I might be able to shove a couple more somewhere. Getting a couple hours of light out of it would be nice.
Going through my tackle box of parts I found a sliding switch that looks like it will do what I want. After playing around with it and 2 LEDs I believe I have it doing what I want.
![Posted Image](http://img842.imageshack.us/img842/9186/circuit1u.jpg)
Having the switch in position 1 lights LED 1, sliding it down to position 2 lights LED 2, position 3 lights up 1 & 2.
So Question 1: Is this working because it's wired correctly or am I shorting something out somewhere?
Question 2: How can I incorporate my 2 sets of different voltage LEDs into this circuit?
The red LEDs are 2.0 - 2.2 volts and the blue LEDs are 3.2 - 3.4 volts. All 20mA. I know I need resistors in there somewhere but as I haven't chosen a power supply I am ignoring them for now.
I can't really wire them in series because I would need like 15 AA's which won't fit. I've read that LEDs in parallel is a semi bad idea.
Would wiring each set of 4 LEDs in serial (4 reds, 4 blues), and then wiring those sets in parallel be a feasible solution? Could I still incorporated the 3 position switch?
Or is the voltage difference too much? Am I asking too much of 4 AAs? I'm open to other power suggestions.
Any thoughts would be greatly appreciated. : /