Hi!
Do enyone know how i can make a led turn on that uses 3 volts, when a voltage has reached 330volts?
I am trying to make a indicator turn on when a capasitor is full..
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Hi!
Do enyone know how i can make a led turn on that uses 3 volts, when a voltage has reached 330volts?
I am trying to make a indicator turn on when a capasitor is full..
Bit myself on the behind with my sloppy use of symbol. I meant || to mean 'or.' I was just being cute by not spelling it out // is my symbol for in parallel. We use Schmidt triggers to help cope with slowly rising signals. They are a great tool in switch debounce, for example. Very often, just a wee bit of hysteresis (that's the amount of displacement of the cross-points) is all we need to make the circuit work just finely. If this is not the case, we have to watch the situation and make our cross-point levels precisely based upon the empirical data. These are very useful if we want a saturated edge, for example, as an input to a counter. If the hysteresis resistor is really (in value, low conductance) big, the crosspoints aren't altered much. Then we don't have to go to a buncha computational bother if that intervention happens to cleans up the circuit. A very stable and predictable oscillator can be built with a Schmidt. I will go to my drawing board and show some ideas in an hour or two.
One limitation in electronics for most of us is that electronic parts cost money. You can learn tons by downloading a SPICE program such as LTSPICE and playing around with it. I wish they had it well-developed and free when I was coming up. Op Amps can be used to make just about anything. The downside is you havta have a fairly extensive resistor collection. I am sorry for my sloppy use of the symbol, and take in good spirit your advice to slow down and try to explain things for everyone.
Bit myself on the behind with my sloppy use of symbol. I meant || to mean 'or.' I was just being cute by not spelling it out // is my symbol for in parallel. We use Schmidt triggers to help cope with slowly rising signals. They are a great tool in switch debounce, for example. Very often, just a wee bit of hysteresis (that's the amount of displacement of the cross-points) is all we need to make the circuit work just finely. If this is not the case, we have to watch the situation and make our cross-point levels precisely based upon the empirical data. These are very useful if we want a saturated edge, for example, as an input to a counter. If the hysteresis resistor is really (in value, low conductance) big, the crosspoints aren't altered much. Then we don't have to go to a buncha computational bother if that intervention happens to cleans up the circuit. A very stable and predictable oscillator can be built with a Schmidt. I will go to my drawing board and show some ideas in an hour or two.
One limitation in electronics for most of us is that electronic parts cost money. You can learn tons by downloading a SPICE program such as LTSPICE and playing around with it. I wish they had it well-developed and free when I was coming up. Op Amps can be used to make just about anything. The downside is you havta have a fairly extensive resistor collection. I am sorry for my sloppy use of the symbol, and take in good spirit your advice to slow down and try to explain things for everyone.