Hi daffy,
how many groups of LEDs are you planning to use over a distance of 10m?
If a group of LEDs is used with the LEDs arranged in horizontal order a group of 5 LEDs will require a total of 2,500 LEDs, if arranged vertically the total number of LEDs will be 25,000.
A single counter with 5 usable outputs won't suffice for your application. So you require multiple counters cascaded for the proper sequence.
Also, do all groups have to be lit in sequence, or do you want to light group 1 and 6, then 2 and 7 and so on?
Boncuk
i think its 500 LEDs, and if its grouped then 5 LEDsx100 groups.
so use a 4017 as primary counter X axis, and another 4017 to count its resets Y axis . so totally a matrix of 10x10 = 100.
by taking out from 1st counter and another out from 2nd counter and making them by and AND out driver transistor (ie when both are high the transistor will drive the group of 5) this task can be completed.
i think he may need
555 - 1
4017-2
ressitors and transistors - 100 x2 each (its like switch on two transsitors to get one group on.
Edit: one transistor can be used as a emitter follower and other as a switch, use current limiting resistor and the group of LEDs to connect both transistors emitter and collector respectively.
I thought of this last night. Is there any reason this idea wouldn't work? It uses 1 555, 3 4017s, 65 NPNs, and 10 current limiting resistors to sequence 500 LEDs each staying on for ~ .5 seconds. I think given a high enough supply voltage, the idea could be expanded indefinitely. For 2 4017s 100 LEDs, 3 4017s 1000, 4 4017s 10000, etc. What does everyone think?
View attachment 38018
Sorry I didn't think it was vague. Think of a line that is 10 meters long with one row of LED's spaced at 2cm apart. If I group every 5 LED's it should look like a 'bar' moving from one side to the other. Get it? There will be a total of (10x100)/2 = 500 LED's with a total group (or so called LED 'bars') of 100. I have 10,000 LED's available.
Application? A fool proof 'follow me this way' path.
Pretty cool. I wonder if the column switches should be PNP's
and the resistors should be in the collector(s) line.
Nicely drawn up.
A couple of notes:
* it's better to use a voltage below the 'absolute maximum' rating of the ICs. Not all 555s are the same; I have 2 datasheets here, one has 16V abs max and the other 18V abs max. I would suggest reducing the supply voltage.
* The emitter resistors on the column drivers are not a good way to do it. The output of the 4017 will be loaded down to the voltage across the emitter resistor + 0.7V. There should be a base resistor and a collector resistor.
5 LED with Vf of 3V = 15V
That leaves 16 - (15 + .18) = .82V left over which means I should change the 150Ω resistors to:
.82/.02 = 41Ω.
Does that seem right?
Thanks for the comments. Keep em' coming!
If you want 1 driver per group of LEDs. It's going to work out to be very expensive and not simple to wire up. I must say I prefer vne147's matrixed version which uses minimal parts.
vne147's circuit does not work - there is no way for the 12V logic source to forward bias a BE junction into 16V of LEDs. easily corrected with an extra set of transistors and resistors but kind of kills the "low componewnts count" bragging pointIf you want 1 driver per group of LEDs. It's going to work out to be very expensive and not simple to wire up. I must say I prefer vne147's matrixed version which uses minimal parts.
The base voltage would be 12V, the emitter voltage would be ~11.3V & the collector voltage would be 21V. The transistor would drop ~9.7V (VCE).When the output of the 4017 is high, the voltage at the base of the NPN will be 12V but the voltage at the emmiter will be almost the full 21V from the supply.
The column (those with emitter connected to ground) transistors will work (they'll sink current). I might reduce the 33k resistor but it's not very important.I don't understand why the column transistors wouldn't have worked if there was only one supply rail. Maybe someone can explain it to me?
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