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Advertising Index
Altronics.................................39-46
Blackmagic Design....................... 7
Dave Thompson........................ 103
Emona Instruments.................. IBC
Hare & Forbes............................ 4-5
Jaycar..................IFC, 10-11, 27, 67
Keith Rippon Kit Assembly....... 103
Lazer Security........................... 103
LD Electronics........................... 103
LEDsales................................... 103
Microchip Technology.............OBC
Mouser Electronics....................... 3
OurPCB Australia.......................... 9
PCBWay....................................... 13
PMD Way................................... 103
SC Battery Checker..................... 65
SC USB-C Power Monitor......... 103
SC Keyboard Adaptors............. 100
Silicon Chip Shop.................90-91
Silicon Chip Subscriptions........ 99
The Loudspeaker Kit.com.......... 87
Wagner Electronics..................... 12
Errata and on-sale date
High power H-bridge uses
discrete Mosfets, Circuit
Notebook, November 2017:
the PCB design is missing a
connection between pin 3 of IC1
and the pad of the 3.6kW resistor
immediately next to pin 5 of IC1.
This can be fixed by adding a short
length of insulated wire.
Next Issue: the December 2025
issue is due on sale in newsagents
by Thursday, November 27th. Expect
postal delivery of subscription
copies in Australia between
November 25th and December 12th.
104
Silicon Chip
is damaged. Have you tried our DCC_
Programmer_Shield_V2.ino sketch? It
is a much simpler way of testing the
hardware. We would be interested to
see waveforms (or AC/DC voltages) on
IC1’s pins 5 and 9; they might indicate
which of the out-of-phase signals has
the problem.
If you have any photos of your construction/arrangement, please send
them to us so we can look for any obvious problems.
Options for making a
Driveway Monitor
The driveway to our house is about
50m long. I would like to detect a car
coming when it’s within about 20m
from the house; there is a convenient
garden to install a sensor there. A signal would go to the house to switch a
light on for a prescribed time. A standard IR sensor mounted at the house
does not have this range.
Can I use John Clarke’s Driveway Monitor project from the July &
August 2015 issues (siliconchip.au/
Series/288) to do this? Are the parts
still available 10 years later? If not,
perhaps I could run a solar-powered
IR motion sensor in the garden and
communicate to the house via WiFi to
switch the light on. That’s all I really
need. (R. W., King Creek, NSW)
● For a while, it was difficult to find
the main detector IC used in the 2015
Driveway Monitor (the HMC1021S) at
a reasonable price. However, DigiKey
has recently obtained a very large number (over 10,000) and they are selling
them for $11.58 each (siliconchip.au/
link/ac85). So for now, at least, it is
still possible to build our 2015 design.
Still, Jaycar sells a wireless driveway sentry that flashes LEDs and plays
a ‘ding dong’ tone when a vehicle is
detected. Its output could be adapted
to switch on a light. See www.jaycar.
com.au/p/LA5178
Synchronising older
clocks to GPS time
Some time ago I built a couple of
your Big Digit 12/24 Hour LED clocks,
as described in the March 2001 issue
(siliconchip.au/Article/4235). The
clocks work well and have been put
into service in a couple of our local
churches. However, they still need to
be manually adjusted from time to time
to keep the clocks accurate, and also
Australia's electronics magazine
when daylight saving begins and ends.
I notice that you have presented
many clocks in Silicon Chip over the
ensuing years and have more recently
also presented enhancements to many
of them, enabling them to be GPS synchronised.
That seems a very worthwhile
exercise, and I wonder whether John
Clarke’s design I mentioned above
could be modified simply to improve
its accuracy. If so, how could I interface a GPS module, and where would
it connect in the circuit?
I know I could probably build one of
your more recent designs, but seeing
as I have already built otherwise good
clocks, I wonder whether they could
be improved with the addition of a
GPS module. (N. A., Canberra, ACT)
● The Big Digit 12/24 Hour LED
Clock uses a 4MHz crystal for timekeeping (and also to run the microcontroller), so you would need a way of
producing a GPS-locked 4MHz signal
to do what you suggest.
We have published several circuits
that can provide a 10MHz reference
locked to satellite signals, such as the
May 2023 GPS-Disciplined Oscillator (siliconchip.au/Article/15781). So
it could be done if we can find a way
to convert a 10MHz signal to 4MHz.
While you can certainly do that with
a phase-locked loop (PLL), there is a
simpler method that may work. Build
the GPSDO and feed its 10MHz output
to a decade counter like the 74HC4017.
That chip can run from 5V, operates to
over 70MHz and has 10 outputs that
go high in sequence, numbered Q0
through Q9.
If you then connect the Q0, Q2, Q5
and Q7 outputs to the four inputs of
half of a 74HC4002 dual 4-input NOR
gate, you should get a 4MHz square
wave at the corresponding output.
It will have significant jitter, but
we don’t see why that will matter in
this application, since the PIC16F84
is rated to run up to 10MHz, and the
shortest pulses in this scheme are only
equivalent to a 5MHz clock.
Note that you could pick any four
non-consecutive outputs from the
74HC4017, where Q0 and Q9 are considered consecutive. If you can’t easily
get a 74HC4002 (they are still available
in DIP & SMD packages), you could use
a 74HC32 quad 2-input OR gate, with
two of the outputs fed to one pair of
inputs, making a 4-input OR gate with
SC
one spare 2-input gate.
siliconchip.com.au
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