Yeah, that's better, but I'm still skeptical that simply turning the LEDs off when no wiimotes are connected will be sufficient to avoid the issue. From personal experience, my unit always got warm in less than 2 minutes of use, and using it moderately (around one hour per day) during one week was enough to burn the LEDs from both sides of the bar. Although I fixed it myself (replacing the IR LEDs and switching to resistors of proper values) the "trick" they implemented in firmware doesn't look effective to me, those faulty units sooner or later are going to burn anyway (e.g. long play sessions) and it limits the functionality (I know people who use Dolphin Bar with Wii U as sensor bar replacement because it's cheaper, at least where I live, and as good as the official -- they can't anymore). Also, from the wirings inside the bar, the microcontroller used on it can't control the voltage fed to the IR LEDs, it can only turn them on or off. In short, they can't prevent this without a hardware redesign...
Avell A70 MOB: Core i7-11800H, GeForce RTX 3060, 32 GB DDR4-3200, Windows 11 (Insider Preview)
ASRock Z97M OC Formula: Pentium G3258, GeForce GT 440, 16 GB DDR3-1600, Windows 10 (22H2)
ASRock Z97M OC Formula: Pentium G3258, GeForce GT 440, 16 GB DDR3-1600, Windows 10 (22H2)