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Circuits > Oscillators and timers > 72 LED Clock
72 LED Clock
In the circuit below, 60 individual LEDs are used to indicate the minutes of
a clock and 12 LEDs indicate hours. The power supply and time base circuitry is
the same as described in the 28 LED clock circuit above. The minutes section of
the clock is comprised of eight 74HCT164 shift registers cascaded so that a single
bit can be recirculated through the 60 stages indicating the appropriate minute
of the hour. Only two of the minutes shift registers are shown connected to 16 LEDs.
Pin 13 of each register connects to pin 1 of the next for 7 registers. Pin 6 of
the 8th register should connect back to pin 1 of the first register using the 47K
resistor. Pins 2,9,8, 14 and 7 of all 8 minutes registers (74HC164) should be connected
in parallel (pin 8 to pin 8, pin 9 to pin 9, etc.). The hours section contains two
8 bit shift registers and works the same way as the minutes to display 1 of 12 hours.
Pin 9 of all 74HCT164s (hours and minutes) should be connected together. For 50
Hertz operation, the time base section of the circuit can be modified as shown in
the lower drawing labeled "50 Hertz LED Clock Time Base". You will need an extra
IC (74HC30) to do this since it requires decoding 7 bits of the counter instead
of 4. The two dual input NAND gates (1/2 74HC00) that are not used in the 50 Hertz
modification should have their inputs connected to ground.
When power is applied, a single "1" bit is loaded into the first stage of both
the minutes and hours registers. To accomplish this, a momentary low reset signal
is sent to all the registers (at pin 9) and also a NAND gate to lock out any clock
transitions at pin 8 of the minutes registers. At the same time, a high level is
applied to the data input lines of both minutes and hours registers at pin 1. A
single positive going clock pulse (at pin 8) is generated at the end of the reset
signal which loads a high level into the first stage of the minutes register. The
rising edge of first stage output at pin 3 advances the hours (at pin 8) and a single
bit is also loaded into the hours register. Power should remain off for about 3
seconds or more before being re-applied to allow the filter and timing capacitors
to discharge. A 1K bleeder resistor is used across the 1000uF filter capacitor to
discharge it in about 3 seconds. The timing diagram illustrates the power-on sequence
where T1 is the time power is applied and beginning of the reset signal, T2 is the
end of the reset signal, T3 is the clock signal to move a high level at pin 1 into
the first register, T4 is the end of the data signal. The time delay from T2 to
T3 is exaggerated in the drawing and is actually a very short time of just the propagation
delay through the inverter and gate.
Two momentary push buttons can be used to set the correct time. The button labeled
"M" will increment the minutes slowly and the one labled "H" much faster so that
the hours increment slowly. The hours should be set first, followed by minutes.
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72 LED Clock circuit |
Title: 72 LED Clock
Source: unknown
Published on: 2007-07-21
Reads: 765
Print version:  Circuits > Oscillators and timers > 72 LED Clock |
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