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Light dependent resistors...

Posted: Sat Oct 06, 2012 9:34 am
by Externet
Hi.
Is there any type of these LDR that will decrease its resistance when dark ?

Re: Light dependent resistors...

Posted: Sat Oct 06, 2012 1:17 pm
by Edd
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Sr Externet . . . . .

With the initial implied semantics of " these LDR " I just then had to bring the mouse on in close enough proximity to see if it would then key onto those words, as further being tied into any hot linking referencing examples. It wasn't.

I know of of no chemical compositions responding in that reversed manner with the photo-resistive effect characteristics.

Since you have already mentioned the available variable photo resistance units, and with them NOT being self generating, with their dependency on a secondary voltage source passing through them.

A possibility ? ? ?
Why not use one of them feeding into the base /gate of a transistor /FET in the manner of then using IT for creating the "phase reversal" of its photo effect, with that voltage variance output then being retrieved at the collector / drain of the selected device.
If further needed, that could even supplementaly give you some lattitude in custom tailoring its voltage limit swing by selection of the designed stage gain.

If needing output reference, being to ~ OVDC as being ground.
Using an emitter follower for the second stage, with proper phased voltage input from prior staging, could keep the voltage on the proximity of close to near O VDC output when fed with a high bright light input into the drive photo-resistive cell.

Thasssitttt . . . . .


73's de Edd
[email protected] . . . . . . . . (Interstellar~~~~~Warp~~~~Speed)
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There was a power outage at our local department store yesterday. . . . .
There were almost twenty people trapped trapped on the escalators.





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Re: Light dependent resistors...

Posted: Mon Oct 08, 2012 11:09 am
by Externet
Thanks Sir Edd. OK, no such reversed behavior LDR.

Yes, a simple inversion circuit as the 'Dark activated' here:
----> http://www.sentex.ca/~mec1995/circ/actrelay.htm

Without D1, Led1, R2, and sustituting Ry1 with a string of leds.
Then those would turn on dusk to dawn.

Re: Light dependent resistors...

Posted: Mon Oct 08, 2012 6:05 pm
by Bob Scott
Externet wrote:Thanks Sir Edd. OK, no such reversed behavior LDR.

Yes, a simple inversion circuit as the 'Dark activated' here:
----> http://www.sentex.ca/~mec1995/circ/actrelay.htm

Without D1, Led1, R2, and sustituting Ry1 with a string of leds.
Then those would turn on dusk to dawn.
Oh, Sentex and Rony Van Roon (RIP). His site outlives him.

You could improve it using an op-amp with a little hysteresis so that the relay doesn't chatter during dawn and dusk.

EDIT: Perhaps the relay already provides a degree of hysteresis. I'd look inside my LED night lights but they're all glued when assembled. They use CdS LDRs.

Re: Light dependent resistors...

Posted: Mon Oct 08, 2012 7:41 pm
by Dean Huster
In most applications, it's just where you put the LDR in a voltage divider that will reverse its resultant action .... on the supply side or on the grounded side.

Re: Light dependent resistors...

Posted: Tue Oct 09, 2012 3:17 am
by Lenp
Many of the outside light sensors use a cell to pass current to a resistor that acts as a heater which heats a high current bi-metal switch.
Rugged, cheap and a workable delay. Unless it is hit by lightning, it's near bullet proof!
Len

Re: Light dependent resistors...

Posted: Tue Oct 09, 2012 4:37 pm
by Bob Scott
Lenp wrote:..........a high current bi-metal switch.......
There's yer hysteresis right there. :grin:

Re: Light dependent resistors...

Posted: Mon Dec 03, 2012 3:03 pm
by jimmy101
never mind