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  • blink led
Related

Flashing Led's

commanderkelly
commanderkelly over 6 years ago

Hello, I am new to this site and loving it. I did a bit of Electronics in 1995 where I made a flashing led circuit with 2 led's and it was cool. My other hobby is model trains and I would like to put 2 small led's in buffer stops and make them flash and run it off a DC train controller. Does anyone have a simple circuit that would do the job for this? I am basically a noob at electronics but I can follow a simple circuit.

 

Thank you.

 

Gary.

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Top Replies

  • 14rhb
    14rhb over 6 years ago +12 suggested
    Hi Gary, Welcome to Element 14 Community. Although a long time ago, you have already completed the first step on the world of modern electronics - the famous 'blinky' experiment . I'm assuming you want…
  • beacon_dave
    beacon_dave over 6 years ago +8 suggested
    Probably can't get much simpler than a flashing LED: https://uk.farnell.com/c/optoelectronics-displays/led-products/flashing-blinking-leds Size may be an issue however. 3mm is the smallest listed.
  • fmilburn
    fmilburn over 6 years ago in reply to 14rhb +7 suggested
    Hi Rod and Gary, I am more of a digital guy but I saw this and had to build it. The circuit is close to the first link that Rod gave above. The voltage source is 4 AAA, R1 and R4 are 330 ohm, R2 and R3…
  • commanderkelly
    0 commanderkelly over 6 years ago in reply to 14rhb

    Hello Rod,

     

    I will do that, I seen a resistor pack on Amazon I will get to do the job as it should have what I need in it.

     

    Gary.

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  • commanderkelly
    0 commanderkelly over 6 years ago in reply to 14rhb

    Hello Rod,

     

    I made the Flashing led circuit but got a prob, I made a video for you to check.

     

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G2GYehn22DU&list=PL-kfiq8mHqQ2-8B3Lid3TlONV2XteJgby

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  • e14phil
    0 e14phil over 6 years ago

    I'm a big fan of "flashing LEDS", you can buy them off the shelf and they flash without a timer circuit.

    The only drawback is that you don't have control over the speed they flash.

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  • fmilburn
    0 fmilburn over 6 years ago in reply to commanderkelly

    Hi Gary,

     

    As you noted, it appears it is flashing so rapidly at 14V that it almost appears constantly lit.  So, the circuit is charging and discharging too rapidly with the higher voltage.  A solution might be to use a resistor in line with the voltage source to reduce it down to 9V or possibly lower.  Using Ohms Law and assuming a 5 V reduction and current on average 20 mA we get a resistor or 5V / .02 = 250 ohms.  You could use a 1000 ohm potentiometer set up as a rheostat to control the blink rate.  Alternatively you could swap out resistors R1 and R4 for higher resistance in the circuit.  Rod will correct me if I am wrong :-)

     

    Frank

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  • commanderkelly
    0 commanderkelly over 6 years ago in reply to fmilburn

    Hello Frank,

     

    I will try what you have said and let you know.

     

    Gary.

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  • commanderkelly
    0 commanderkelly over 6 years ago in reply to e14phil

    Hello Phil,

     

    Yeah I like them to, I am going to be putting 2 leds in Butter stop for a railway lay out. I am trying to make a circuit that will run off a 14V controller.

     

    Gary.

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  • commanderkelly
    0 commanderkelly over 6 years ago in reply to fmilburn

    Hello Frank,

     

    I try what you said and there was no change so I change the caps from 10uf to 100uf. It did seem to slow it just a bit so maybe adding a adding a high value ones will help.

     

    Gary.

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  • fmilburn
    0 fmilburn over 6 years ago in reply to commanderkelly

    I will try breadboarding the circuit when I get back home...

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  • fmilburn
    0 fmilburn over 6 years ago in reply to commanderkelly

    OK, disregard everything I said above.  Should have thought this through and looked closer before posting...

     

    R1 and R4 control current through the LEDs and serve to make them brighter or dimmer.  R2 and R3 (along with the capacitors) control timing.  In the video below increasing R2 and R3 by a factor of 20 demonstrates the concept.  Do a search for RC time constant to learn more.

     

    If you use a potentiometer as a voltage divider it will also change the rate (and the LED brightness).  This is demonstrated in video as well ( the probes on the multimeter are backwards which is why it shows negative voltage ).

     

    You don't have permission to edit metadata of this video.
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    Forget the potentiometer and try playing with R2,R3 resistance and capacitance.  Thanks to Rod for pointing out this simple but humbling little circuit.

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  • 14rhb
    0 14rhb over 6 years ago in reply to fmilburn

    As you noted, it appears it is flashing so rapidly at 14V that it almost appears constantly lit.  So, the circuit is charging and discharging too rapidly with the higher voltage.

    Yes, it does appear so. I'm not quite so sure about the reason though - I thought this circuit's timing was proportional to the C and R only and not supply voltage dependant?

     

    I'm having a think....

     

    Rod

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