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Circuits > Models and model remote control > Downed Model Locator
Downed Model Locator

If you know people who fly slope gliders frequently, you probably
know someone who has lost a glider in the weeds or bushes. Here is a circuit I've
shamelessly swiped from George Steiner's book "A to Z - Radio Control Electronic
Journal" that may help you find your glider. I modified the circuit to use parts
currently available at your local Radio Shack store, and modified it to decrease
false triggering from low voltage spikes in the on-board power system when full
sized or higher torque servos are used.
Your transmitter sends a set of pulses to your receiver every 20
milliseconds, and your receiver in turn sends an individual pulse to each of your
servos at the same interval. This circuit is a pulse omission detector--an alarm
sounds when the pulses, originating from your transmitter, are no longer present.
By plugging this circuit into an unused servo socket on your receiver, you can turn
on the alarm by turning off your transmitter.
The first capacitor C1 filters out DC voltage, preventing an aggressive
automatic gain control of some current receivers from shutting off the alarm even
when your transmitter is off. The first transistor Q1 serves to flip the pulse to
negative modulation that the 555 needs. The C2 capacitor and the R4 resistor establish
the time interval--if no pulse is received in the time it takes to charge the capacitor
through the resistor, the alarm sounds. The interval is the resistance multiplied
by the capacitance: 1uF x 47k = 0.000001F x 47000 ohms = 0.047sec = 47msec which
is a little over twice the standard 20msec R/C frame rate--this device uses a little
longer interval than the frame rate to prevent false triggering. The other capacitor
C3 smoothes the control voltage on the 555, preventing false triggering from spikes
in the supply voltage. Unless a pulse opens the Q2 transistor to drain the C2 capacitor
before the capacitor is fully charged, the pin 6 threshold senses a high voltage
and triggers the output pin 3 to go low, sinking current across the buzzer and making
noise. With the reset pin 4 high, the discharge pin 7 drains the capacitor, and
the cycle starts again.
The circuit draws 1mA (!) when idle and 4 mA when buzzing. I've
been using large peizo buzzers (see part numbers below) because they are light and
loud, and the 6 volt electromagnetic buzzer where weight is not so much of a concern.
The circuit uses your receiver battery for power. For the ultimate
in reliability, you can use an additional battery to supply the alarm as follows.
Connect only signal and negative leads to your receiver socket, and connect the
second battery positive to positive circuit lead and negative to negative circuit
lead. You will need to put some kind of switch in series with the second battery
to keep it from running the alarm when you are not flying. With the extra battery,
you will still be able to find your plane if your plane went down because of a receiver
battery failure, or if your receiver battery fell out in the crash. You can use
a nine volt battery for this, but be careful to NOT connect the nine volt battery
to your receiver--or you will smoke your receiver. Note: Do NOT solder to a button
battery--they explode.
Here are few Radio Shack parts numbers. You can substitute other
types of capacitors; tantalum capacitors are just physically smaller. Polarity of
the tantalum capacitor probably does not matter at this low voltage (compared to
the rated maximum voltage), but to be particular, the positive lead would be directed
toward the input signal lead and away from the negative side. Power in this circuit
is minimal and you can use the smallest resistors you can get your hands on (get
1/8 watt if you can, but any power rating will work).
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273-065
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peizo buzzer
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$2.99
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273-054
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electric buzzer
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$2.59
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276-1604
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2N3906-type PNP transistors, 15 per
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$2.29
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276-2016
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2N3904 NPN transistor
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$0.59
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276-1723
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LM555 timer IC
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$1.29
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272-1434
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1uF tantalum capacitor
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$0.59
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271-xxx
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1/4 watt resistors (10k, 47k, 4.7k, 5 per)
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$0.49
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George Steiner's book, crammed with cool R/C radio info, can be
had for $19.95 postage paid from the following:
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GSP AZ Journal
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2238 Rogue River Drive
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Sacramento CA 95826
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phone: 916-362-1962
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Title: Downed Model Locator
Source: www.electronics-lab.com
Published on: 2005-02-02
Reads: 637
Print version:  Circuits > Models and model remote control > Downed Model Locator |
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