J
Jonathan Kirwan
Guest
On 21 Jun 2005 06:21:17 -0700, "obliquez" <obliquez@gmail.com> wrote:
piezo only requires a constant voltage to be applied in order to work.
Even if it performs reasonably well when tried, I have a hard time
believing that the teacher would want you to simply connect the two
without a driver circuit.
were the problem. We don't have the exact equivalent here in the US,
though it sounds about like "going to community college" to me. My
apologies for my own ignorance about this possibility.
....
So, can you first say if you are allowed to use two different supply
voltages from a bench supply to run your circuit? Also, do you
already know for sure which level is used by the sensor output signal
line for the case when the liquid covers it? I sort of believe John's
thought that it is LO when covered and HI when not covered, but I'm
just not sure anymore.
Has the teacher taught you much about BJTs? If so, can you describe a
little of how you think about them? It will help a lot when writing a
useful reply.
Jon
You probably _are_ supposed to use a driver circuit. Even if thesnip
Wow, I'm sorry, but i don't quite get it. Are you saying that i don't
need a buffer circuit? I can just connect the sensor directly to the
buzzer? Coz my teacher insists that i do need a driver circuit. Hence
all the questions.
piezo only requires a constant voltage to be applied in order to work.
Even if it performs reasonably well when tried, I have a hard time
believing that the teacher would want you to simply connect the two
without a driver circuit.
Ah. Thanks for that. I figured it might be my own assumptions thatI am not an undergrad. I'm not getting a degree. Where I'm from, we
have schools called Polytechinics (17-19 yr olds). So i'm not sure
what's it equivalent to in your country. =)
were the problem. We don't have the exact equivalent here in the US,
though it sounds about like "going to community college" to me. My
apologies for my own ignorance about this possibility.
....
So, can you first say if you are allowed to use two different supply
voltages from a bench supply to run your circuit? Also, do you
already know for sure which level is used by the sensor output signal
line for the case when the liquid covers it? I sort of believe John's
thought that it is LO when covered and HI when not covered, but I'm
just not sure anymore.
Has the teacher taught you much about BJTs? If so, can you describe a
little of how you think about them? It will help a lot when writing a
useful reply.
Jon