Hi, I’m Quindor
The maker behind QuinLED and Intermittent Technology.
I design LED controllers — and I spend a slightly unreasonable amount of time figuring out how to make LEDs work properly, so you don’t have to. What started years ago as my own itch to scratch grew into QuinLED: a family of open, DIY-friendly boards that thousands of people now use to light up their homes, workshops, gardens and Christmas displays.
What I build. The QuinLED line is built around the ESP32 and runs WLED and ESPHome out of the box. There’s the Dig-Uno and Dig-Quad for addressable LEDs, the modular Dig-Octa for big installs, the plug-and-play dig2go, the An-Penta analog dimmers, and supporting hardware like the Data-Booster and the long-distance Diff system. Every board is designed to be safe and genuinely usable — proper fusing, level-shifting and real power handling — whether you solder it yourself or buy it pre-assembled.
How I work. I test things for real. Almost everything you’ll read on this site — how long a data wire can run, how much current a strip takes from one injection point, why LEDs need cooling, which strips are actually worth buying — comes from hands-on measurement on my own bench, not repeated internet folklore. If I say a 5V strip pulls about 4 amps from a single feed, it’s because I measured it.
The community is the best part. QuinLED has always been community-first. The QuinLED Discord is where it all happens — thousands of friendly people helping each other build, troubleshoot and show off their setups, and where I hang out pretty much every day. And if you like learning by watching, my YouTube channel is full of deep-dives, livestreams and build guides — honestly the best place to start.
I genuinely love this stuff. Helping someone get their first strip lighting up correctly, or seeing a massive build finally come together, never gets old. Thanks for being here — come say hi on Discord or YouTube, and let’s make some light.
