Electrodawg
New Member
Hi I am new to the forum and was wondering if there would be someone that would be willing to help me build an electronic timer that is accurate to 1000 ths of a sec? I am very handy know a little about electronics but not a lot, have soldered a lot and built simple electronics before and can read basic schematics, would mostly need the help designing the over all circuit.
This is what I have in mind:
I plan on using a temperature compensated crystal oscillator using a frequency of 1mhz, and dividing it down to 100hz. I would use a 555 timer circuit for the clock generator, but unfortunately they are too inaccurate for this purpose. The crystal oscillator is accurate to +/-1ppm, so out of 1 million pulses in a second, it might miss one pulse. I can live with that kind of accuracy. The clock generator signal will not start until after the start button is pushed. Once the timer starts, it will be directed into a Counter/Display driver, which uses a 4 digit 7 segment LED display. Four digits will get me 0.000-9.999 seconds. The laser module will be set at the finish line, opposite an enclosed photodetector circuit. When the beam is broken, the counter will stop, leaving the finished time displayed on the main box.
So that quote makes me sound like I really understand electronics but I found that on the web when looking for schematics for electronic times. Someone else is wanting to build the same thing I would like to build but unfortunately that post was very old and did not go into any details at all.
I there is anyone who you like to help out a guy and maybe get me started? I would really appreciate it!
Sincerely,
darren
This is what I have in mind:
I plan on using a temperature compensated crystal oscillator using a frequency of 1mhz, and dividing it down to 100hz. I would use a 555 timer circuit for the clock generator, but unfortunately they are too inaccurate for this purpose. The crystal oscillator is accurate to +/-1ppm, so out of 1 million pulses in a second, it might miss one pulse. I can live with that kind of accuracy. The clock generator signal will not start until after the start button is pushed. Once the timer starts, it will be directed into a Counter/Display driver, which uses a 4 digit 7 segment LED display. Four digits will get me 0.000-9.999 seconds. The laser module will be set at the finish line, opposite an enclosed photodetector circuit. When the beam is broken, the counter will stop, leaving the finished time displayed on the main box.
So that quote makes me sound like I really understand electronics but I found that on the web when looking for schematics for electronic times. Someone else is wanting to build the same thing I would like to build but unfortunately that post was very old and did not go into any details at all.
I there is anyone who you like to help out a guy and maybe get me started? I would really appreciate it!
Sincerely,
darren