I designed this circuit yesterday (no doubt someone has designed it before). I think it could be a useful one, so I am putting it on my blog. It is an in-line switch -- and its possibilities are many. One inserts it into a 5V to 15V power line, to automatically switch up to a few tens of Watts. Basically it switches in response to variations of light, heat, pressure, rotation, and so on. As shown here, LDR1 (a light dependent resistor) switches things
on as night falls. But swap LDR1 and VR1 around, and it switches things
off as night falls. LDR1 may be replaced with a
thermistor, to switch on
temperature rising or falling. What is the maximum value of LDR1? Double that, and make that the value of VR1. Then adjust VR1 to suit. VR1 is ideally a multi-turn preset.
OBSERVATION: Potentially, this circuit has many more uses -- and more inventive ones. It is so simple, one can build it without a PCB. Note that switch-on and switch-off do not
occur at precisely the same points -- but if one uses this for, say, an
automatic balcony light, this matters little. Search for component pin-outs on the Internet. One may optionally tie the rest of IC1's inputs high. My design is © Copyright.
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