Rain Alarm 555 Timer Project
by devinglover18 in Circuits > Electronics
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Rain Alarm 555 Timer Project
This project, was an introduction to building an electronics system. The goal was to make a rain alarm in which a rain detection sensor would sound an alarm if the sensor detected moisture.
There are many real life examples where this circuit could be useful. Some examples include:
- Outside near a garden to know if the garden is being watered or not by moisture.
- In a basement where water may leak. There are probably other sensors that could be more efficient but this one would certainly work.
- Outside in general to know whether it is raining or not.
While constructing this project, I originally intended to install a few rain sensors in parallel, which I eventually decided not to due to simplicity and it being my circuit board build.
Supplies
The components used included:
- A Bread Board to assemble all of the components.
- A 12 Volt Rain detection sensor, with a relay control module potentiometer.
- A 555 Timer
- Three transistors: Two BC547 and One BC557
- Jumper wires
- Any audio speaker
- 6 Resistors including: (1k, 10k, 33k, 39R, 47k, 100k,)
- 2 Capacitors each (10n)
The Entire Build
Unfortunately, as my first time I didn't think much of taking pictures of each step in the processes. In addition, I was too excited that it worked in the end that I did not capture a video of the speaker making noise as the sensor went off. This build took more time than I expected because the circuit would not properly work for a large amount of time. After much time problem shooting everything, it turns out that the issue was a transistor that was working improperly.
Step 1: Gather all the materials
Step 2: To verify the resistance of each resistor, use a multimeter to double check.
Step 3: Follow the diagram and connect each component accordingly. Some advice it to make sure the transistors are correctly aligned with base and emitter. The circuit board that I used had voltage and ground built into it.
Step 4: Add moisture to the sensor and hear the wonderful noise of the circuit working correctly.