Strobe/Flasher circuit
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- Glorfindel
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- Location: Long Island, NY
Strobe/Flasher circuit
For those who know way more than I do. I purchased a single LED Flasher circuit from the Fiber Optic Store. This product here: http://www.fiberopticproducts.com/store ... ts_id=1264
And it comes pre-wired to a 9v battery clip. I wanted to hard wire it to a permanent 9v power supply so I cut off the battery clip and connected the circuit to my breadboard to perform a test run. Of course I'm using a 9v wall adapter plugged in to my breadboard and when I plug the adapter in nothing happens. Why is this? When I touch the neg/pos ends to the battery the circuit blinks, yet nothing when hooked up to the breadboard. I'm baffled. Any suggestions or is it a case of you get what you paid for? The circuit is only $8.50 so I'm not crushed, just disappointed.
Any suggestions on where to purchase a more reliable circuit?
And it comes pre-wired to a 9v battery clip. I wanted to hard wire it to a permanent 9v power supply so I cut off the battery clip and connected the circuit to my breadboard to perform a test run. Of course I'm using a 9v wall adapter plugged in to my breadboard and when I plug the adapter in nothing happens. Why is this? When I touch the neg/pos ends to the battery the circuit blinks, yet nothing when hooked up to the breadboard. I'm baffled. Any suggestions or is it a case of you get what you paid for? The circuit is only $8.50 so I'm not crushed, just disappointed.
Any suggestions on where to purchase a more reliable circuit?
Last edited by Glorfindel on Sat Mar 09, 2013 10:05 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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- Joseph Osborn
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Are you sure your adapter is working and that its connections to your breadboard are solid?
<i>Fireball Modelworks</i>
- Glorfindel
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Joe I hooked up several other LED's to the breadboard and they light up just fine. I'm so perplexed. (Can I say that?) I switched out adapters, wire...in case of a short, different slots on the breadboard because some just don't connect (and use slots that are known to connect) I'm at my wits end.
Buck Laughlin: [after Beatrice the dog jumps up on the show judge] He went for her like she's made outta ham.
~Best in Show, 2000
~Best in Show, 2000
- Joseph Osborn
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What happens when you touch the adapter directly to the circuit's leads that you snipped, bypassing every potential problem in the breadboard?
<i>Fireball Modelworks</i>
- Glorfindel
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I tried that, nothing. That's why I'm stumped. Did that with two different adapters and still the circuit didn't light. Yet at the battery it does. I'm thinking that the circuit is safe guarded at 9v and adapters actually give off a bit above 9v. That's why the circuit lights at the battery and not the adapter. The thing is that there looks like there's nothing to this chip. I can't see it having any type of voltage protection....not for $8.50.
Buck Laughlin: [after Beatrice the dog jumps up on the show judge] He went for her like she's made outta ham.
~Best in Show, 2000
~Best in Show, 2000
- Joseph Osborn
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It should run on just about any voltage from 6 to 12 because all it looks like is a simple 555 circuit. Do you have a multimeter to test the adapters and see what their true outputs are?
<i>Fireball Modelworks</i>
- Glorfindel
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- Bellerophon
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Make sure the board still works by hooking it up to a good 9V battery.
If the board's okay, make sure the adapter is wired to the board with the correct polarity. If that's right, the problem is probably that the adapter is putting out something other than steady DC, like rectified AC. This makes your 555 chip reset 60 times a second. A big enough capacitor across the power inputs could fix that. Or get a better adapter.
If the board's okay, make sure the adapter is wired to the board with the correct polarity. If that's right, the problem is probably that the adapter is putting out something other than steady DC, like rectified AC. This makes your 555 chip reset 60 times a second. A big enough capacitor across the power inputs could fix that. Or get a better adapter.
- Glorfindel
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I just ordered a better adapter this morning and a back up circuit chip, from Ngineering, in case I send this one to the lumber yard.Bellerophon wrote:Make sure the board still works by hooking it up to a good 9V battery.
If the board's okay, make sure the adapter is wired to the board with the correct polarity. If that's right, the problem is probably that the adapter is putting out something other than steady DC, like rectified AC. This makes your 555 chip reset 60 times a second. A big enough capacitor across the power inputs could fix that. Or get a better adapter.
Buck Laughlin: [after Beatrice the dog jumps up on the show judge] He went for her like she's made outta ham.
~Best in Show, 2000
~Best in Show, 2000
- Glorfindel
- Posts: 1549
- Joined: Sat May 02, 2009 7:00 pm
- Location: Long Island, NY