DLM Warp Waddell system
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DLM Warp Waddell system
First of all I have to say this is a great kit and reasonably priced if you buy the upgrade parts. My problem is I can't get the ion pods to strobe. The nav lights are working fine, but I can not get those lights to blink at all! Thanks in advance.
Last edited by NathanJ on Thu Jun 11, 2009 4:39 pm, edited 1 time in total.
3909 is the strobe chip; I think it's an 8-pin IC but I can't remember which ones are the + and - outputs. From the web, I see:
Fit the LED to pins 6 and 8. The short LED leg (cathode) goes to pin 8. The long LED leg (anode) goes to pin 6.
Make sure you are getting around 1.5 VDC between those two pins (on/off of course; it is a strobe .
Fit the LED to pins 6 and 8. The short LED leg (cathode) goes to pin 8. The long LED leg (anode) goes to pin 6.
Make sure you are getting around 1.5 VDC between those two pins (on/off of course; it is a strobe .
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I think Don said that he laid in a collection of them just before you couldn't get them anymoreMadman Lighting wrote:LM3909? THAT chip? Wow.
I used that chip years ago for a blinky project. Neat little part, easy to use too. Where do you get them? I thought they didnt make them anymore.
That's why none of us can get them anymore - he hoarded the entire remaining quantity
That's ok, I still like the 555 - gives me more control
Indeed, I'm the one responsible for the worldwide LM3909 shortage. When I was working on the board with Don many eons ago, I mentioned that a local surplus store (Active Surplus on Queen W in downtown Toronto) had a bunch of 'em; I scooped them up and sent them to Don.
What I loved about this chip was how easy it was to get a great looking strobe effect (triangular sine wave). With a 555, I've only ever been able to get a square wave, i.e. 'blinky'. Nowadays, I just use a programmable PIC to do a strobe ...
What I loved about this chip was how easy it was to get a great looking strobe effect (triangular sine wave). With a 555, I've only ever been able to get a square wave, i.e. 'blinky'. Nowadays, I just use a programmable PIC to do a strobe ...
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Ah, the LM3909. It was a fun chip to play because all you ever needed was a capacitor and a resistor to run an LED (it had a voltage booster, I think). Just plug an AA battery in there and it will blink the LED for a few weeks.
The chip went obsolete last millenium and against the still going strong 555, the only application I ever saw was those "torch finders". Perhaps its due to the "limited" market.
But it was also the best quick solution circuit when I wanted a blinkie in a tight space (before SMD technology was available to the masses)
The chip went obsolete last millenium and against the still going strong 555, the only application I ever saw was those "torch finders". Perhaps its due to the "limited" market.
But it was also the best quick solution circuit when I wanted a blinkie in a tight space (before SMD technology was available to the masses)