Hi all I happen to be a trainee teacher and I am totally new to electronics, over the past few months I worked on a small electronic project, which was all about connecting an IC 555 astable mode, with a double 4017. All I wanted to achieve was simply a motion light for a D/T secondary school toy project. The circuit was drawn using PCB wizard, which did a great job, but unfortunatley I would not know now how to explain this diagramm to a 12 year old, neither to my teachers, plus it doesn't even work.see attachments
I would not mind also just if any of you out there colud tell me in simple terms how this two circuits can be connected triggering the LEDS to light up in numerical order.
try this circuit.....you need to use yr 555 circuit to drive the attatched circuit in the uploaded file.....it has all the necessary gating and the switch on reset circuit included to clock two 4017s one after the other.....pin 15 0f the 4017 is the reset pin for the counter which when taken hi the counter is reset,the gating is arranged so when the first counter reaches its end of count it is inhibited and the second counter is enabled until that reaches its end of count and then its final count output then resets both ics and the whole sequence starts again with the first counter active then the second counter,then reset to start again....
I think you should neaten up your practical work before you start teaching electronics. Make the board smaller, mount the resistors neatly and flat on the board and get rid of those flying leads and solder the LEDs directly to the board.
You might think I'm being picky but many errors can result from sloppy construction rather than bad circuit design. When you get to do more skilled projects which involve high frequencies low currents or high impedances neat and compact construction becomes mandatory.
It drives 24 LEDs from three cascaded decimal counters (HCF4017) and includes driver transistor arrays for highest possible LED brightness.
The board size is determined by the number and diameter of the LEDs. (Used: 24LEDs at 5mm diameter)
Board size: 6.3X1.9"
Clock frequency can be varied from 27 to 110Hz.
I agree with hero999 considering circuit construction. There are too many wires with the possiblity of faulty connections, resulting probably in fried IC's instead of a functioning circuit.
The attached circuit has not been tested yet, but the simulation is right.
Boncuk
P.S. If you want to see a real "Veste" google for Veste Coburg, a strong fortress (wall thickness 1.5m) which defeated Wallenstein's siege in the middle ages. Prince Albert (Earl of Sachsen-Coburg-Gotha) should also be well known in the UK (at least in the Royal family).