Electronics-Related.com
Forums

Amateur alarm circuit problem

Started by RobH November 22, 2020
On 25/11/2020 11:37, Jeroen Belleman wrote:
> On 2020-11-25 10:19, RobH wrote: >> On 25/11/2020 04:42, Rich wrote: > [...] > >>> >>> The question was quite clear, but perhaps you missed it, so I'll >>> repeat it below: >>> >>>> Are you using bipolar 555's or CMOS 555's? > [...] >> >> Is this any clearer: >> >> https://drive.google.com/file/d/1PL_AeVMofix5-WLABwicplR49_bNAyrj/view?usp=sharing >> >> >>  If it's not then , I'll just forget about it, as it was only >> something I wanted to do while in lockdown. >> >> I didn't miss your question about the 555's as I answered you: >> >> As I said in my OP I built the circuit from an article in a book I >> bought several months ago, and it doesn't say to use CMOS 555's or >> bipolar 555's, but just 555's. >> >> In case you missed my  OP, I already built the said circuit >> previously and have it working fine. > > This is becoming a 'dialogue de sourds'. The question was > "Are you using bipolar 555's or CMOS 555's?". You did *not* > answer that question. Just give us the exact type as read > from the actual DIP you have in there! > > You still haven't explained what the intended effect of > the added components is. How are we to know what it is > *supposed* to do? > > Your picture still leaves much to be desired, hiding several > crucial details. One thing is clear though: The potentiometer > will have little or no effect until it reaches either end. > > If the LED lights at all, it will likely be full on or full > off with the potentiometer at either end, and perhaps blink > for intermediate settings. Even so, this abuses the 555, the > potentiometer and the 9V battery. You seem to be trying to > overpower the 555's output with the centre tap of the > potentiometer. > > Jeroen Belleman >
From my OP: The said circuit produces a siren type sound on a buzzer so I added an led through a resistor, a 10k pot and a LDR. So when light hits the LDR, the alarm goes off. Again, the same or earlier circuit works fine so I'll just leave it at than now. Thanks
RobH <rob@despammer.com> wrote:
> On 25/11/2020 04:42, Rich wrote: >> RobH <rob@despammer.com> wrote: >>> On 24/11/2020 16:43, Rich wrote: >>>> However, your new schematic above does *not* show the center pin of >>>> the 10k pot connected to pin 2 of the top 555. It shows the center >>>> pin of the 10k pot connected to the positive voltage rail, and the >>>> positive voltage rail connected to pin 2 of the 555. Note also that >>>> your annotations are wrong. You have the line to pin 2 annotated as >>>> "to pin 3" and the wire to pin 3 annotated as "to pin 2". >>>> >>>> So, either your textual description is wrong, or your new schematic >>>> drawing additions are wrong. But you can't expect anyone here to be >>>> of much help when you provide incorrect information at the outset. >>>> >>> Oops, apologies for the error in the previous schematic of added parts. >>> I have corrected it now: >> >> Are you sure you have. Your new schematic photo now shows a dead short >> between the positive and negative power rails, and does not show three >> pins on the 10k pot (so no center pin connected anywhere. >> >>>> Also, your schematic shows no bypass capacitors for the 555's. You've >>>> left out another critical bit of information. Are you using bipolar >>>> 555's or CMOS 555's? Because if you are using bipolar 555's, you'll >>>> very much want to add bypass cap's across the 555 power rails. >>> >>> As I said in my OP I built the circuit from an article in a book I >>> bought several months ago, and it doesn't say to use CMOS 555's or >>> bipolar 555's, but just 555's. >> >> The question was quite clear, but perhaps you missed it, so I'll repeat >> it below: >> >>> Are you using bipolar 555's or CMOS 555's? >> >>> https://drive.google.com/file/d/1O4LWsY41SLjjMaRgLAbh7kONCRkAx9LR/view?usp=sharing >>>> >>>> Also, another tip, when positing schematic pictures here asking for >>>> help, it is best to add numbers to all the components (i.e., R1, R2, >>>> C1, C2, U1, U2, ...). That helps you and us have a common nomenclature >>>> with which to refer to specific items on the schematics. >>>> >>> >>> I've named the added 320 ohm resistor as R1, and both the led and the >>> 10k pot centre pin is connected to pin 3 on the 555 >>> >>> https://drive.google.com/file/d/1OyIH7dWiGtX08ytolqDMsCqT-tQxg8nz/view?usp=sharing >> >> This schematic shows only two of three pins of the pot (presumably you >> have a three pin pot, as you did begin with "center pin of pot >> connected..." >> >> But with the dead short in this version across the power rails (if the >> schematic matches how you have it wired), all you will achieve from >> this version is warming up your power supply (or blowing it up, >> depending on whether it tolerates a dead short). >> > > Is this any clearer: > > https://drive.google.com/file/d/1PL_AeVMofix5-WLABwicplR49_bNAyrj/view?usp=sharing
No. A photo of your breadboard is not *clearer* -- in fact it is almost worse than having nothing at all.
> If it's not then , I'll just forget about it, as it was only something I > wanted to do while in lockdown. > > I didn't miss your question about the 555's as I answered you: > > As I said in my OP I built the circuit from an article in a book I > bought several months ago, and it doesn't say to use CMOS 555's or > bipolar 555's, but just 555's. > > In case you missed my OP, I already built the said circuit previously > and have it working fine.
And you have still avoided *actually answering the question*. There are three proper answers: 1) I am using bipolar 555's 2) I am using CMOS 555's 3) I don't know, the numbers on the top of the chips are: .........
RobH <rob@despammer.com> wrote:
> On 25/11/2020 11:37, Jeroen Belleman wrote: >> On 2020-11-25 10:19, RobH wrote: >>> On 25/11/2020 04:42, Rich wrote: >> [...] >> >>>> >>>> The question was quite clear, but perhaps you missed it, so I'll >>>> repeat it below: >>>> >>>>> Are you using bipolar 555's or CMOS 555's? >> [...] >>> >>> Is this any clearer: >>> >>> https://drive.google.com/file/d/1PL_AeVMofix5-WLABwicplR49_bNAyrj/view?usp=sharing >>> >>> >>> &#4294967295;If it's not then , I'll just forget about it, as it was only >>> something I wanted to do while in lockdown. >>> >>> I didn't miss your question about the 555's as I answered you: >>> >>> As I said in my OP I built the circuit from an article in a book I >>> bought several months ago, and it doesn't say to use CMOS 555's or >>> bipolar 555's, but just 555's. >>> >>> In case you missed my&#4294967295; OP, I already built the said circuit >>> previously and have it working fine. >> >> This is becoming a 'dialogue de sourds'. The question was >> "Are you using bipolar 555's or CMOS 555's?". You did *not* >> answer that question. Just give us the exact type as read >> from the actual DIP you have in there! >> >> You still haven't explained what the intended effect of >> the added components is. How are we to know what it is >> *supposed* to do? >> >> Your picture still leaves much to be desired, hiding several >> crucial details. One thing is clear though: The potentiometer >> will have little or no effect until it reaches either end. >> >> If the LED lights at all, it will likely be full on or full >> off with the potentiometer at either end, and perhaps blink >> for intermediate settings. Even so, this abuses the 555, the >> potentiometer and the 9V battery. You seem to be trying to >> overpower the 555's output with the centre tap of the >> potentiometer. >> >> Jeroen Belleman >> > > From my OP: > The said circuit produces a siren type sound on a buzzer so I added an > led through a resistor, a 10k pot and a LDR. > > So when light hits the LDR, the alarm goes off.
Three days in, 21 articles, and only *now* do you actually state why you added the extra components. Your OP three days ago left off the "So when ... off." sentence.
On 11/22/2020 7:05 AM, RobH wrote:
> I built an alarm circuit from a book I bought called Make Electronics > by Charles Platt. > > https://drive.google.com/file/d/1NxvKdZCqykuSjBvPVoWz_MEMhKYMMz9E/view?usp=sharing > > > The said circuit produces a siren type sound on a buzzer&nbsp; so I added > an led through a resistor, a 10k pot and a LDR. I then connected the > centre pin of the 10k pot to pin 2 on the top IC555 shown on the > schematic > > > Working&nbsp; version of the circuit > https://drive.google.com/file/d/1NwYnNkljKLd7ORmZ16VYrtb7ZwCsvAn_/view?usp=sharing > > > As the said circuit was working as I wanted with the ldr and buzzer, I > built another of the same circuit. > > On this 2nd circuit, the led goes off when I adjust the 10k pot, but > the sound does not. It does on the first circuit I built. > > Thanks
I'll take a stab at it. But I'm making a guess without looking closer. Looking at this layout,
> https://drive.google.com/file/d/1NxvKdZCqykuSjBvPVoWz_MEMhKYMMz9E/view
&nbsp;The top 555 has a slow on/off rate, the slow square wave controls the bottom 555 that has a fast &nbsp;fast on/off rate (frequency). From your description you want the sound to go quiet when light hits the LDR. &nbsp;The best way to make the sound stop is to hold pin 2 of the bottom 555 high. Try that, put a 470 &Omega; resistor from + to pin 2 of the bottom 555. If the sound doe not stop, try 100 &Omega;. &nbsp;Does the sound stop? &nbsp;If it does, then you need to make a circuit to pull that pin 2 high when their is light. Sometime in your previous experiments you had an LDR wired to a 555 that would make pin 3 go high when there was light. That would rewire a 3rd 555. Can you just wire an LDR to pin 2 of the bottom 555, maybe, with some resistor changes. &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Mikek -- This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. https://www.avast.com/antivirus
On 25/11/2020 5:55 pm, RobH wrote:
> On 25/11/2020 09:40, Jeroen Belleman wrote: >> On 2020-11-25 09:10, Phil Hobbs wrote: >>> On 11/24/20 4:54 PM, Jeroen Belleman wrote: >>> >>>> >>>> For an older electronics professional, it is sometimes good to >>>> be reminded how many errors a beginner can make. I had your >>>> problems fifty years ago. (No, I didn't have 555s then.) >>> >>> And you had to make protons go round and round in mason jars. ;) >>> >>> Cheers >>> >>> Phil Hobbs >>> >>> "In my day, we defragged hard disks by editing the inodes by hand. >>> With magnets" >>> >>> >> >> In those days, I had no idea that one could become a 'physicist'. >> There were no engineers or academics in my environment, or my >> choices might have been quite different. I discovered the very >> existence of labs dedicated to physics research when I was 19 >> years old, quite accidentally as a side effect of my negligence >> to secure a local position as a technical student. It turned out >> to be a lucky strike. :-) >> >> Jeroen Belleman > > Aah, well I was a mechanical engineer for over 40 years, and I can read > drawings including schematics. I can't draw tho'.
Yup, I think we can all agree on that one :-)