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peteskiThat is a broad statement - what do you consider detection? a low of < 0.2v?What is your IR transistor load resistor? How is it connected common emitter -driving an opamp etc?Bread board my circuit with just the IR diode and IR transistor and let me know at what distances you get a true low ie <0.2 voltsat various diode currents.Al
The statement was broad but valid.I have to dig up the design paperwork. I was using a 10k load resistor and feed the output to a Low power Shottky TTL buffer input.Looking at your circuit, it seems to me that increasing the R1 value to much higher value (maybe 22 or 47k) should increase the sensitivity. You could do the same to the other 4.7k resistors in that circuit. Right now I don't have time to breadboard your circuit and experiment.
"The statement was broad but valid."I don't consider it valid under all circumstances. Consider:From 'Texas Instruments Optoelectronics and Image Sensors' 1990Applications -Interfacing discrete phototransistors to digital logic circuits:Assuming 95% of ambient light is blocked the transistor load resistor calculates to bebetween 11 kohms and 19 kohms.assuming 80% of ambient light is blocked the transistor load resistor calculates to bebetween 2.7 kohms and 6.5 kohms."Looking at your circuit, it seems to me that increasing the R1 value to much higher value (maybe 22 or 47k) should increase the sensitivity. You could do the same to the other 4.7k resistors in that circuit."True and I have done that and it does increase sensitivity but when designing a circuit that you haveno control over where it is going to be used one had better use the formulas from the above referenced book or similar ones. So my choice of 4.7 kohms was a tradeoff.I have used a load resistor as high as 22 kohms for a circuit that was used exclusively in my house.My train building has windows that allow the great IR source in the sky to affect these circuits unlessambient light is blocked to some extent. Look how Boulder Creek Engineering blocks ambient lighton their "TrainBoss" IR detectors. You think they hung those big black things there for looks?RegardsAl
Which specific digital logic is the book talking about? TTL, LS-TTL, CMOS? They all have very different input current requirement which plays big role in determining the load resistor. Whatever it i, my choice to user 10k resisttor seems to follow the book's recommendation. Then there are book-smarts and actually building a circuit and experimenting. I choose to get my theory from the book, then experiment and come up with a circuit which works. Books like that are for reference, not absolute gospel which has to be blindly followed.I never leave the phototransistors uncovered and exposed to ambient light. I always place them in some sort of enclosure which narrows its view angle and aim it at the light source. Sometimes all it takes is a piece of black heat-shrink tubing and some black paint. It doesn't have to be bulky.Your circuit works (with high-power IR LEDs) and my circuit also works (using IR LEDs with less than 20mA going through them). I guess we'll just leave it at that.
For Posterity.Al
N scale Wig Wag taken from a layout I visited last night.
Petski.Nope this is N scale. But is Australian prototype.. So we drive on the left so the cross backs and signal are on the "Correct" side..
Otto: does the light flash or stay steadily lit on the American WigWags?
Petski,The track is Peco Code 55.
Brendan, whose layout?Peteski, at least the ones I'm familiar with here in California, they had lights on both sides, see pic....