Showing posts with label 555. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 555. Show all posts

Sunday, November 1, 2009

Flashing Bat Eyes




Very simple project. You just need a 555 timer a couple of resistors, a capacitor, a couple of LEDs and a talented wife to provide a bat ;) I think she'll be adding a post on making the Halloween bats so I'll link to it once it's up.

I used the following online calculator to work out the values for R1, R2 and C1 for the standard astable 555 set up. I ended up with: R1 = 3K Ohm, R2 = 570 Ohm and C1 = 100uF (mainly because that was the combination of components that I had lying around and that gave an acceptable output wave). I didn't bother adding a switch to this one, I'm not sure why as it'd be very easy... here's the fully wired up project:


Did you notice the 9V battery clip onto an 2xAA holder? Weird eh? Useful though. I think I picked up the battery case at radioshack. You'll also have noticed that I decided to try a free-form (no perf-board) approach. It was a bit fiddly, but worked out ok. I still haven't found a combination of 3rd hand/clamp/foot/nose that works for me for these fiddly soldering projects...

Here's a couple of close-ups of the soldered 555 itself:

Most of the time I had the 555 held with a crocodile clip (on the 3rd hand). Unfortunately, I bought a really cheap 3rd hand from a market and the crocodile clips are not stable so everything kept moving around whilst I was trying to work on it... bah. At points I ended up jamming the chip into a corner of the 3rd hand base whilst pushing at it with the soldering iron. Not very elegant or skilled... any advice is greatly welcomed!

All that's left was to poke out some holes for the bats eyes and to mangle it all into the available space. I made the holes big enough for the dome of the LEDs to fit through but small enough to prevent the rest of the LED housing from pushing through.


And here it is outside our house (flashing on the opened door frame), waiting to welcome the trick-or-treaters :)



Saturday, June 6, 2009

555 noisemaker

When I started off on the electronics journey I bought the solar powered theramin kit (heliophone) from the makershed I thought it'd be a fun thing for the kids and would be a good starting point for learning to solder. The heliophone uses a solar panel to generate power and produces a clicking noise (the frequency of clicks varies with the intensity of ambient light).

The noisemaker I wanted to make sounds pretty similar but runs off a battery and uses a 555 timer to generate pulses which drive the speaker. Like with the heliophone kit, we alter the frequency of the 'clicks' with changes in ambient light intensity. In this case, it uses the standard "astable" set-up for the 555 and switches R1 for an LDR.

This is a pretty simple set-up and it makes a horrendously annoying noise; so it's perfect for the kids :) My inspiration for this came from this hack-a-day post on tiny-optical-theramins.

I'd already bought a few 555s and LDRs (again due to my eBay issues) so it seemed daft not to make something out of them, especially if the kids were likely to enjoy it.



Here's the final kit. I still want to house it in an interesting way, but I'll have to employ my lady's creative talent to produce something attractive. Maybe I'll paint an alien face on the tin with the LDR sticking through as it's mouth and get the kids to 'feed' it light.


Here's a little test run I did with Ffion, she got distracted pretty quickly by stuff going on in the next room...