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For waterproofing consider a sheet of clear laminate from office supply. It also serves to protect the lens from scratches somewhat. If it gets scuffed or discolored you can peel it off and replace it.Believe in truth. To abandon fact is to abandon freedom.
Nature bats last.
80 GS850G / 2010 Yamaha Majesty / 81 GS850G
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bakalorz
Originally posted by TheRedlineMan View PostIf you use an LM3914 chip you can attach it directly to a 10 stage bar graph, and then monitor how much power fluctuates at particular revs.
http://http://www.thegsresources.com...d.php?t=107610
If anyone is interested, I still have them.
I couldn't get the files small enough to post here, so I have to send them via email ...
Some time after that, Duanage and I were talking about stuff and he mentioned doing a single LED display using a red/green bicolor LED.
He was thinking of using comparaters and 555s and such.
I was just starting to experiment with microprocessors, and thought that would be much better done with a PIC.
Using a PIC, it would be easy to get all the following colors out of ONE led as the voltage goes from say 8 to 17 volts:
fast red flashing, red flashing, solid red, yellow flashing, solid yellow, green flashing, solid green, red-yellow-green alternating, red-yellow-green-yellow-red fading.
I have the pics, and bought one of the LEDs to experiment with.
The circuit should be pathetically simple: the PIC, the LED, three or four resistors, and a capacitor.
I'll probably play with it as time permits.
Would there be any interest in this when I get it done.
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KiwiGS
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gaillarry
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TheRedlineMan
Originally posted by bakalorz View PostI did one with 2 of the 3914s cascaded for a 20 segment display, and offered up the plans here
http://http://www.thegsresources.com...d.php?t=107610
If anyone is interested, I still have them.
I couldn't get the files small enough to post here, so I have to send them via email ...
Some time after that, Duanage and I were talking about stuff and he mentioned doing a single LED display using a red/green bicolor LED.
He was thinking of using comparaters and 555s and such.
I was just starting to experiment with microprocessors, and thought that would be much better done with a PIC.
Using a PIC, it would be easy to get all the following colors out of ONE led as the voltage goes from say 8 to 17 volts:
fast red flashing, red flashing, solid red, yellow flashing, solid yellow, green flashing, solid green, red-yellow-green alternating, red-yellow-green-yellow-red fading.
I have the pics, and bought one of the LEDs to experiment with.
The circuit should be pathetically simple: the PIC, the LED, three or four resistors, and a capacitor.
I'll probably play with it as time permits.
Would there be any interest in this when I get it done.
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dennis roy
I bought one of those "gizmos" lol. The first one was defective, it didn't read the right voltage. I called the place I bought it from and they took it back and sent a new one that worked fine......until I dropped it. Then the voltage doesn't read right until i tap it a couple times and the clock jumps ahead an hour anytime it feels like it. I wired it in with a plug so I can take it off the bike if it rains. Oh and then to add insult to injury, I put navigation on my bike...wired it in to the wires for the "gizmo" and wired it in wrong LOL the temp guage doesn't work now. Am I on a roll or what? I'll order another this winter now that the wiring is right and I won't drop this one. Maybe i'll try to laminate like someone said in an earlier post.
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bakalorz
Originally posted by Gravity Tester View PostDid this ever come to life for you , ! lamp would work great in my couling.
I believe I just changed the indication with a pot rather than having it actually read the voltage, cause that was easier to pick the indication you wanted to test. But reading the voltage is the easy part.
I was kind of disapointed in the way the Red/Green LED looked.
Red was ok, and green was ok, but yellow looked kinda bleh ...
(you get yellow by "mixing" red and green, which looked ok from some angles, but appeard as a red and green "blotching" from other angles)
A different R/G LED might work better, and an RGB LED probably would.
In the end, I got it to work well enough to prove the concept, but I just lost intrest in finishing getting it from the breadboard to a printed circuit board and on the bike.
I also came to think the LM3914 based one from earlier in the thread would work better on the bike ergonomically. It gives an instant view of the voltage, and the analog interp is easy to get "at a glance".
With the "one LED" idea, to get more than an idiot light you need to have various flashes as described above, and to read them takes a bit more than a quick glance.
If you do electronics and can program pics, I'll send you my source, and recomendations on how to approach it if you want to take it further.
If you want a ready made solution, I'm sorry but I have too many other projects to really pursue this one much further.
Martin
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twiggy2cents
here is the one i did. http://www.reuk.co.uk/LM741-OpAmp-Voltage-Indicator.htm
I too wanted a simple light instead of the bar gauge, after some fiddling i got it right, it was very sensitive to adjustments!
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