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Start a led on a sertent voltage

magnus2112
magnus2112 over 11 years ago

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..

Thanks for eny help! image

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  • jw0752
    jw0752 over 11 years ago +1
    Hi Magnus, Just some additional information that may be of help. In the old days I used to work on battery powered camera flashes. They would run off 3V or 6V battery power. An oscillator would charge…
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  • D_Hersey
    0 D_Hersey over 11 years ago

    image

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  • D_Hersey
    0 D_Hersey over 11 years ago in reply to D_Hersey

    This is the canonical schmidt relaxation oscillator.  It will work on a single supply.  If the supply voltage is correct, and the timing components are realistic, it will work with nearly any op-amp or comparator.  If the comparator is OC type, use a 2K PU resistor at the output.  All resistors that don't directly connect to the timing capacitor are equal and otherwise non-critical, go with something like 75K.  Not shown, but darned important, is the local decoupler, start w/ 100nF, maybe.  Don't expect good operation without it.  This is an excellent circuit to simulate.  That's why I drew in the op-amp  pwr, the simulator will quail without it.  Try 20K and something nF-ish for the timing components, to start.  If you can't readily dope this one out in yo' head, you should spend the time to simulate it.  The only grumble I've ever heard about this baby is that the initial cycle is longer than the rest.  Why?

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  • jw0752
    0 jw0752 over 11 years ago in reply to D_Hersey


    Hi Don,

     

    Thanks for all your time explaining things to me. I went back and studied what you wrote yesterday and clicked on your drawings so I could see all the traces. Each time I understand a little better. As for your question as to why the first cycle of the oscillator is longer that the rest I would guess that the timing capacitor doesn't totally discharge after the first cycle where it is initially fully discharged. Other than a slight temperature rise in the components that would occur over a relatively long time the capacitor in the only component that might change characteristics over a single cycle by retaining a slight charge. I will get out my prototyping boards and components and play with your drawings in the next few days. I have desiged a few simple devices in the past using op amps as timers. I got myself in trouble with my son, who presently owns my old company, when I forgot and left a soldering iron on at the shop. So I built and installed a 1 hour custom timer on the line of the iron. One pushes the button to power up the iron and if you forget it the timer circuit turns it off after a hour. Another time I had a computer on which I wanted to leave a USB memory stick installed to use as a backup. The computer would not tolerate the memory stick on boot up so I built a little timer circuit that used the USB power but kept the logic off line until the computer had fully powered up. This  is the extend of my experience with op amps so I am looking forward to experimenting some more. Let me know if I got the quiz question right or wrong.

    John

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  • jw0752
    0 jw0752 over 11 years ago in reply to D_Hersey


    Hi Don,

     

    Thanks for all your time explaining things to me. I went back and studied what you wrote yesterday and clicked on your drawings so I could see all the traces. Each time I understand a little better. As for your question as to why the first cycle of the oscillator is longer that the rest I would guess that the timing capacitor doesn't totally discharge after the first cycle where it is initially fully discharged. Other than a slight temperature rise in the components that would occur over a relatively long time the capacitor in the only component that might change characteristics over a single cycle by retaining a slight charge. I will get out my prototyping boards and components and play with your drawings in the next few days. I have desiged a few simple devices in the past using op amps as timers. I got myself in trouble with my son, who presently owns my old company, when I forgot and left a soldering iron on at the shop. So I built and installed a 1 hour custom timer on the line of the iron. One pushes the button to power up the iron and if you forget it the timer circuit turns it off after a hour. Another time I had a computer on which I wanted to leave a USB memory stick installed to use as a backup. The computer would not tolerate the memory stick on boot up so I built a little timer circuit that used the USB power but kept the logic off line until the computer had fully powered up. This  is the extend of my experience with op amps so I am looking forward to experimenting some more. Let me know if I got the quiz question right or wrong.

    John

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