GolfHos

General => The Cantina => Topic started by: Clive on February 08, 2008, 08:26:26 PM



Title: Electrical Gizmo Project
Post by: Clive on February 08, 2008, 08:26:26 PM
OK, for reasons I won't go into, I would like to make a device that powers a little alarm/siren/light/whatever for perhaps 1-2 seconds upon a motion sensor being tripped.  Along the lines of those annoying lights your neighbor probably has mounted at the corners of his garage, the ones that light up when you walk down the opposite side of the street at night, robbing you of all night vision.  You know the ones.

Except smaller and shorter in duration.  I just want to provide power to a 12V DC device for a second or two, then power it down.  I figure it should involve a relay, as that's simple to close/open.  The alerting element should be triggered for a couple seconds and then turned off (until/unless the sensor again closes the relay).  Don't worry about power sufficient for the alerting element -- I can take care of that elsewhere.  Mostly, I need to kow how to make the alerting element turn off after a second or two -- I don't want it actuated for as long as your standard exterior security floodlight.

Thoughts?  Come on, don't you guys know everything?


Title: Re: Electrical Gizmo Project
Post by: spacey on February 08, 2008, 08:29:22 PM
Start with long cables.


Title: Re: Electrical Gizmo Project
Post by: hobbit on February 08, 2008, 09:58:26 PM
I made one in college, only I called it a burglar alarm - made a piercing sound when an infrared beam was interrupted.  Had a manual switch to shut it off, but setting a timer would be easy enough.

Ready for a do-it-yourself project?  etch your own board, solder your own parts, etc. (If I even still have the design - was 1989 ffs)



Title: Re: Electrical Gizmo Project
Post by: Clive on February 08, 2008, 11:00:44 PM
Soldering iron?  Pfft.  I just glare at the leads, and they melt together in terror.  Old Chuck Norris trick.


Title: Re: Electrical Gizmo Project
Post by: Torpedo on February 09, 2008, 07:34:35 AM
Start with long cables.

Really long cables. ;D