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| Electronic Projects Design/Ideas/Reviews Are you building an electronic project or want to? Maybe you need some assistance? Come and submit your electronic questions here and let our experienced members find a solution. |
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Hey all, I'm trying to build a circuit that when a laser beam focused on a photodiode is broken it sets off a timer to activate a relay for a few minutes, This is the design I'm working on but I 'm having problems, so does anyone have any suggestions
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The photo diode normally operates under reverse bias and draws current when light falls on it, but it cannot make itself forward biased, which is what would have to happen for you circuit to work. I suggest you modify the circuit something like this:
Ratz! I put the diode backward, but otherwise its OK!
__________________
see my website: www.geocities.com/russlk |
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The sensing part of the circuit works fine(most of the time) its a problem with getting the timer to trigger for a few minutes, I'm using a cmos 555 so I thought there wouldn't be any problem with using large resistances to control the timer. I'm using a 100µF tantulum bead capacitor.
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If you must use a 555 for long time intervals (not recommended), use a high quality capacitor (polystyrene etc..) that has low leakage. You will not be able to get very large values.. only say up to a few uF at most but then make your resistor very large to get the large RC. |
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Really, its not worth trying to use a 555 for anything, especially long delays. As suggested, have the 555 counting faster, and have it cascaded into a decade counter, or frequency divider.
dunno if this is something you want to consider, but many PICs have built in clocks... p.s. - i assume you aren't trying to drive the relay directly from pin 3 of the 555...? Even though it can source alot of current, use a transistor and DON'T FORGET the feedback diode! |
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