Are there any readily available materials that will light up under IR for quick verification of whether an IR led is working? I know I could set up a circuit with a phototransistor, but I'd like to see if this would be a viable method first.
Are there any readily available materials that will light up under IR for quick verification of whether an IR led is working? I know I could set up a circuit with a phototransistor, but I'd like to see if this would be a viable method first.
If you look at it through a cam-corder or digital camera, you will see it as lighting up white - this has been commonly used for years to check remote controls. You can also buy a small 'card', I've no idea how they work, but they appear to have a coating which absorbs the IR and gives off visible light - these are sold in the TV trade for testing remotes.
Personally I now use an IR Remote tester I built myself, but it probably wouldn't be of help to you, as it requires 38KHz modulation (as used by IR remotes) - it wouldn't detect an unmodulated IR LED.
You could also simply measure the current through it, and the voltage across it, these would give a good indication if it was working or not.
I have a little card that I use for a UV laser. I hold it up in the beam and it glows bright orange. I know that there was also an IR card that was maybe $3 USD or so (the UV one was ~$100 USD).
I have used cameras for testing for quite a while, but I notice that some of the newer ones are not sensative to IR any more. IR affects photos taken in direct sun-light, and reducing a camera's sensitivity to IR is seen as the way forward... apparently.
All Digital camera detectors will detect IR. The problem is that high quality cameras have a IR filter that removes IR. Get a cheap webcam or better yet a pinhole cam that has no filtering at all.
www.cyberguys.com has a little webcam for $9.95. Part Number 2040582.