Blinking led question
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Blinking led question
I see that you can get blinking leds. Now can I just wire them up to my power source and they will blink? Or do I have to get additional parts to make them blink?
- USS Atlantis
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The ones advertised as "Blinking" contain a micro-circuit in them to cause the blinking effect
No need for additional parts - except AS ALWAYS, a resistor - use the same calcs for the blinky's as for standards
One note - blinky LEDs have notoriously had a much shorter life than standards - something about how they blink
This is not true with standard LED's that have a blinky circuit to drive them
No need for additional parts - except AS ALWAYS, a resistor - use the same calcs for the blinky's as for standards
One note - blinky LEDs have notoriously had a much shorter life than standards - something about how they blink
This is not true with standard LED's that have a blinky circuit to drive them
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- CanabisRex
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- USS Atlantis
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SimplistCanabisRex wrote:well, here's an amended question for the same subject..how do you set up a blinking circuit?
Capacitor and two resistors feeding into a 555 timer
This schematic yields This blinking
By varying the values of R4, R5 and C2 you can vary the pattern
The Diode (D1) is in there to give a less than 50% duty cycle - normally, with 555 timer circuits, your LED has to be ON at least 50% of the time
By putting the diode in parallel with R5, you invert the duty cycle making it less than 50%
Alternately, you could just hook the other end of the diode to the 555 output - make the 555 "sink" current rather than "drive" current...USS Atlantis wrote: The Diode (D1) is in there to give a less than 50% duty cycle - normally, with 555 timer circuits, your LED has to be ON at least 50% of the time
By putting the diode in parallel with R5, you invert the duty cycle making it less than 50%
So set up the 555 for an 85% duty cycle, but hook the LED cathode to the output instead of the LED anode, and then you've effectively got a 15% duty cycle.
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