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Bright flashing light for fake alarm box?

Hi

I bought a fake/empty alarm box for my house, but thought I'd make it
look more realistic by putting some kind of periodic flashing bulb in
the unit.

I made up an astable on stripboard with uneven RC sides, so the thing
flashes very briefly every 1-2 seconds. This works fine, but I used an
LED, which isn't bright enough to be seen through the blue transparent
panel of the alarm box, from any distance at all.

The cct is driven by a 9v battery. Can anybody suggest something I can
use for a bright periodic flash?

Cheers,
Mark
 
T

Terry Pinnell

Jan 1, 1970
0
Hi

I bought a fake/empty alarm box for my house, but thought I'd make it
look more realistic by putting some kind of periodic flashing bulb in
the unit.

I made up an astable on stripboard with uneven RC sides, so the thing
flashes very briefly every 1-2 seconds. This works fine, but I used an
LED, which isn't bright enough to be seen through the blue transparent
panel of the alarm box, from any distance at all.

The cct is driven by a 9v battery. Can anybody suggest something I can
use for a bright periodic flash?

There are several approaches I'd try:

1) The obvious one - substitute a 10mm 'superbright' LED with your
existing circuit

2) Ditto, but with improved circuit using higher voltage, either from
2 x 9V batteries, or mains-derived supply.

3) Ditto, but use substantial capacitor and new circuit to discharge
it quickly through LED

4) Ditto, but experiment with normal filament bulb (e.g, car headlamp
bulbs).

5) Use your existing or slightly modified circuit to activate a relay,
and connect suitable mains bulb via relay contacts to domestic supply.

6) Buy a 12V strobe unit as used in non-fake alarm boxes

7) Make your own strobe unit from a Xenon flash tube (if you know what
you are doing and are comfortable with potentially lethal voltages).
 
Thanks for the suggestions Terry.

I didn't know you could get super bright led's. I'll try them first.
Can you get white/clear ones? I can only see red and green at 3000mcd
at the moment?

Cheers,
Mark
 
J

JeB

Jan 1, 1970
0
Thanks for the suggestions Terry.

I didn't know you could get super bright led's. I'll try them first.
Can you get white/clear ones? I can only see red and green at 3000mcd
at the moment?

You might move the led to the surface of the box.

and I think you can find a led flasher chip that runs a long time off a
single 1.5v battery.
 
D

Don Klipstein

Jan 1, 1970
0
Thanks for the suggestions Terry.

I didn't know you could get super bright led's. I'll try them first.
Can you get white/clear ones? I can only see red and green at 3000mcd
at the moment?

They make blue ones that bright and white ones even brighter. Try
Hosfelt Electronics for "hobbyist" quantities. You can get prime grade
ones from Nichia in fairly small quantities also - see their website
(http://www.nichia.com)

- Don Klipstein ([email protected], http://www.misty.com/~don/ledx.html)
 
B

Bill Bowden

Jan 1, 1970
0
Thanks for the suggestions Terry.

I didn't know you could get super bright led's. I'll try them first.
Can you get white/clear ones? I can only see red and green at 3000mcd
at the moment?

Cheers,
Mark

lsdiodes has 12,000 mcd white LEDs for 90 cents each at:

http://www.lsdiodes.com/5mm/
The price is right, but they are temporally out of stock.

-Bill
 
R

Rich Grise

Jan 1, 1970
0
lsdiodes has 12,000 mcd white LEDs for 90 cents each at:

http://www.lsdiodes.com/5mm/
The price is right, but they are temporally out of stock.

I can't imagine how the OP thinks that anything but a jellybean red LED in
a grommet through the skin of the box would look like any kind of "real
alarm."

Unless you're a casino, with those black domes in the ceiling, security
cams have a red LED, even the real ones.

Good Luck!
Rich
 
P

peterken

Jan 1, 1970
0
Hi

I bought a fake/empty alarm box for my house, but thought I'd make it
look more realistic by putting some kind of periodic flashing bulb in
the unit.

I made up an astable on stripboard with uneven RC sides, so the thing
flashes very briefly every 1-2 seconds. This works fine, but I used an
LED, which isn't bright enough to be seen through the blue transparent
panel of the alarm box, from any distance at all.

The cct is driven by a 9v battery. Can anybody suggest something I can
use for a bright periodic flash?

Cheers,
Mark

there are several types and colors of led having the multivib incorporated
beware of the front panel, since it might act as a filter thus actually
"filtering" the red light out
I'd consider bringing the led out of the box by mounting it through the
panel....
 
I thougth about the filtering of the blue front panel, so I decided to
find blue LED's I bought some clear/blue 10mm 14,000mcd bombs that I'm
hoping to try out this weekend.
 
Hi

I made up the cct with blue led, and fitted the box, all running from a
PP3 9v battery.

Worked like a charm....for 3 days, then I guess the battery ran out!

Any megal-long running 9v batteries? or is it back to the drawing
board?

Cheers,
Mark
 
How long do you need it to run between replacements?

Two 9V batteries in parallel will last twice as long (using 1/2 the
current per battery).

N batteries in parallel will last N times longer.

A 9V DC converter will last as long as there is power in your
household.
 
R

Rich Grise

Jan 1, 1970
0
Hi

I made up the cct with blue led, and fitted the box, all running from a
PP3 9v battery.

Worked like a charm....for 3 days, then I guess the battery ran out!

Any megal-long running 9v batteries? or is it back to the drawing
board?

Use 6V worth of alkalines or Ni-Cds or NiMH, cut the duty cycle way down,
and run the LED with as little current as you can and still see it.

Good Luck!
Rich
 
R

Robert Monsen

Jan 1, 1970
0
Hi

I made up the cct with blue led, and fitted the box, all running from a
PP3 9v battery.

Worked like a charm....for 3 days, then I guess the battery ran out!

Any megal-long running 9v batteries? or is it back to the drawing
board?

Cheers,
Mark

How about this circuit? It should keep you going for a while:

.--o--o-----------------------o---------.
| | | | |
| | V LED | .-.
| | - 3.4V | | | Rt
| | | | | |
| | | __ | Rd '-'
Vb --- | | Ro .------o| |o-' ___ |
- | | ___ | .----o|U1|o----|___|--o
| | '--|___|--|-|--- o| |o-----------o
| '------------|-|----o|__|o--. |
| | | | |
| | '------------|--------o
| | | |
| | | |
| | Cc --- --- Ct
| | --- ---
| | | |
----------------o--------------o--------'

U1 TS555CN (Make sure you use a CMOS part like this)

Vb 9 volts
Rt 470k ohms
Rd 1k ohms
Ro 1k ohms
Cc 0.1uF
Ct 10uF

Time between flashes = 3.26s
Quiescent current @ 9V = 200uA
Current required for charging Ct = 12uA
Current required for flash = 9uA (Averaged over period)
Total power budget = 221uA * 9V = 2mW

For a typical 9V, you could have 1000 or more service hours.

(created by AACircuit v1.28 beta 10/06/04 www.tech-chat.de)

You can adjust the length of time of the flash by adjusting the value of
Rd. You can adjust the frequency of flashes by changing Rt or Ct.

For a brighter flash, use a smaller value resistor for Ro. That will
marginally affect the life. Use a high-brightness LED for best results.

Using a low-leakage capacitor for Ct is probably important for the
timing, but it'll be hard to get a 10uF cap that is low leakage. Avoid
electrolytic caps if possible.

When I built this and measured it, it was using more like 150uA
quiescent. The datasheet said 200uA, though. The timing (using an
electrolytic 10uF, 16V) was pretty accurate.

I used the datasheet from STMicroelectroncs for the TS555CN for this
design. I ignored discharge pin leakage, which is claimed to be under 100nA.

http://www.datasheetcatalog.com/datasheet/TS/TS555.shtml
http://www.duracell.com/oem/primary/alkaline/mx1604.asp

--
Regards,
Robert Monsen

"Your Highness, I have no need of this hypothesis."
- Pierre Laplace (1749-1827), to Napoleon,
on why his works on celestial mechanics make no mention of God.
 
D

Don Klipstein

Jan 1, 1970
0
Hi

I made up the cct with blue led, and fitted the box, all running from a
PP3 9v battery.

Worked like a charm....for 3 days, then I guess the battery ran out!

Any megal-long running 9v batteries? or is it back to the drawing
board?

Make sure the battery is alkaline...

Reduce the duty cycle if possible.

If possible, increase the value of any resistor that controls the LED
current. Most blue LEDs are nonliear and have efficiency increasing as
current is changed towards just a few milliamps - most blue LEDs are
noticeably much more than 20% as bright at 4 mA as at 20 mA.

See if the flashing circuit draws much current - I know how to make a
flashing circuit that draws a fraction of a milliamp.

Use an LMC555 and a section of a 4049 inverter to drive an LED with 4 mA
for a low duty cycle (like .2 second on, .8 second off). Total current
draw should be about 1.5 milliamps, which a 9V alkaline battery should be
able to provide for about 400 hours or about 2 weeks. Other circuits,
such as ones using a "low power" op amp as an oscillator, can improve upon
this somewhat. You may get adequate light with just 2 mA or even less of
LED current - it may be possible to get the average current draw down to
about 1/4 of a milliamp and then battery life of about 2-3 months is
possible.

- Don Klipstein ([email protected])
 
W

Watson A.Name - \Watt Sun, the Dark Remover\

Jan 1, 1970
0
Robert Monsen said:
How about this circuit? It should keep you going for a while:

I think you left out the pin numbers so I put Pin One in.

10 uF Electrolytics work okay in this circuit, and so do 10 uF
tantalums. Using a 10 uF plasti cap is going to be really expensive and
it will be huge.

I've built simpler flasher circuits using two transistors and they draw
low current if you set them for low duty cycle, like yours below. See
URL
http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/Bill_Bowden/page5.htm#flash2.gi
f
 
W

Watson A.Name - \Watt Sun, the Dark Remover\

Jan 1, 1970
0
Don Klipstein said:
Make sure the battery is alkaline...

Reduce the duty cycle if possible.

If possible, increase the value of any resistor that controls the LED
current. Most blue LEDs are nonliear and have efficiency increasing as
current is changed towards just a few milliamps - most blue LEDs are
noticeably much more than 20% as bright at 4 mA as at 20 mA.

See if the flashing circuit draws much current - I know how to make a
flashing circuit that draws a fraction of a milliamp.

Use an LMC555 and a section of a 4049 inverter to drive an LED with 4 mA
for a low duty cycle (like .2 second on, .8 second off). Total current
draw should be about 1.5 milliamps, which a 9V alkaline battery should be
able to provide for about 400 hours or about 2 weeks. Other circuits,
such as ones using a "low power" op amp as an oscillator, can improve upon
this somewhat. You may get adequate light with just 2 mA or even less of
LED current - it may be possible to get the average current draw down to
about 1/4 of a milliamp and then battery life of about 2-3 months is
possible.

Better yet, use a two or three AA cell holder, and run it off 3 or
4.5VDC. The AA cells should last 6 months or more. Here's a good
circuit.
http://www.discovercircuits.com/PDF-FILES/3vledfs1.pdf
Those are 2N2222 and 2N2904 transistors. Blue LED won't work with 3V,
you have to have 4.5V. This should last more than a year with two AA
cells. I built one of these and I used a pair of AA cells from a
flashlight that were 'dead', and it ran for over 6 months.
 
Wow, there's a lot of responses here! Thanks. I'll have to take the
time to go through all of them and give them due consideration.

I realised today that when tuning the cct on a breadboard, I varied the
capacitor values to arrive at what I wanted. I really should have made
the capacitor values as small as possible, and varied the R values.

Using an array of 2400MaH NiMh rechargables may have helped too.
Cheers,
Mark
 
W

Watson A.Name - \Watt Sun, the Dark Remover\

Jan 1, 1970
0
Wow, there's a lot of responses here! Thanks. I'll have to take the
time to go through all of them and give them due consideration.

I realised today that when tuning the cct on a breadboard, I varied the
capacitor values to arrive at what I wanted. I really should have made
the capacitor values as small as possible, and varied the R values.

Using an array of 2400MaH NiMh rechargables may have helped too.
Cheers,
Mark

Remember that rechargeable cells lose a certain percentage of their
charge just sitting there, without any load. So you have to recharge
them every few months just to keep them from going flat.
 
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