I Need To Trigger a Relay When an LED Lights Up On a Smoke D

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Jean-Marie Vaneskahian

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I Need To Trigger a Relay When an LED Lights Up On a Smoke Detector

My goal is to use simple battery operated combination Smoke / Carbon
Monoxide detectors in various parts of my house. I want these battery
operated detectors to trigger a simple contact closure when they
alarm.

I noticed that the detectors have a Red LED that lights up when the
Smoke / Carbon Monoxide detector is triggered. I soldered two small
wires to the PCB on the back of the detector in "parallel" with the
Red LED.

When I connect a voltmeter to the two wires I soldered in "parallel"
with the Red LED and now run from the back of the PCB of the Smoke /
Carbon Monoxide detector I get about +0.001V when nothing happens and
+1.78V when I hit the test button on the Smoke / Carbon Monoxide
detector. By the way, the Smoke / Carbon Monoxide detector runs on a
total of 3 AAA 1.5V batteries.

I have a very basic electronics understanding. One concept that I do
NOT understand is that of "Ground". I do understand how to "Wire"
components though.

My question is this:

How do I take the 2 wires running from the back of the PCB on the
Smoke / Carbon Monoxide detector and generate a basic dry "Contact
Closure" when the detector is triggered?

I am sure this requires transistors, diodes, resistors, reed switches
and a separate battery source, but I have no clue how to connect them
and what types and values to purchase. I buy most of these components
from Radio Shack (Part Numbers Would Be Great!).

Please help me put this together. I really appreciate any wisdom on
this topic. My goal is to protect my family by wiring these battery
operated Smoke / Carbon Monoxide detectors to my home alarm system
that uses contact closures.

Thanks a million in advance,
Jean-Marie Vaneskahian
jean@vaneskahian.com
 
Pity there are no such 'extension terminals' available on your units;
(I'm guessing that some models now offer that convenience?)

Anyway, it should be easy enough to do what you want using the direct
wiring approach that you propose, i.e. to end up with a circuit that
closes a normally-open switch which can use trigger your house alarm.
(Or opens a normally-closed switch; you need to check which your alarm
requires.)

Rather than wire across the LED, it would simplify matters if you
could find an accessible connection point which would be 0V when
inactive and 3.5 to 4.5V when active. So I'd make that the first step.
The other connection point should be permanently 0V, i.e. the negative
battery terminal, or a point directly connected to it.

If you can find such a pair of connections, then you can use a circuit
like the one at the top here:
http://www.terrypin.dial.pipex.com/Images/Smoke1.gif

If any of the smoke detectors is activated, the relay is also
activated and the required switching of the house alarm occurs.

If you *can't* find such a 'full range' connection point, before
modifying that suggested circuit it's a good idea to establish which
of various circuit switching arrangements your smoke detector adopts.
I've illustrated 4 examples in the lower diagram, showing the active
and inactive states for each.

You've measured voltage across the LED, so these distinctions won't
have been apparent. If instead you connect the negative lead of your
DMM to the negative terminal of the battery (or any convenient wire
directly connected to it), any measurements you make with the positive
DMM lead will be *relative to 0V. So your DMM will give the same
results as I've shown on the diagram. A little careful experiment will
now quickly establish how your detector is working. Alternatively, you
could remove the battery and measure resistances instead. If it comes
to that, report back and we'll see if any changes are needed.

--
Terry Pinnell
Hobbyist, West Sussex, UK
 
On 8 Nov 2004 13:23:42 -0800, jean@vaneskahian.com (Jean-Marie
Vaneskahian) wrote:

I Need To Trigger a Relay When an LED Lights Up On a Smoke Detector
---
A way to do it without having to modify the CO/smoke detectors (which,
if you did, would surely void their warrany and perhaps give your
insurance company grounds to reject a claim, if you're concerned about
that kind of thing) would be to use an electret microphone to detect
the raucous audio output from the alarm and eventually activate a
relay or a little wireless transmitter which activates a receiver at
the alarm. I'm pretty sure there's some X10 stuff out there which you
could easily adapt for the task, or if you want, we can help you roll
your own.

--
John Fields
 
Thanks so much Terry! Your diagrams are great! I will look for a
trigger point that gives me the full 4.5V as you reccomended. I
really appreciate your time and expertise.

Just to give you an idea of what I am doing. I have a house full of
hardwired 120V AC smoke detectors that are all wired to each other and
are also wired to my alarm system via a relay.

I am adding Carbon Monoxide detectors to certain parts of the house.
I have these small wireless Caddx Alarm system transmitters that
detect a contact closure that have these simple screw down terminals
that were designed to wirelessly monitor doors and windows. I thought
I could use these same wireless Caddx Alarm system transmitters to
detect the status of the Carbon Monoxide detectors based on the RED
Alarm LED.

Since all I need is a simple contact closure a reed relay that
operates at a low voltage should work.

I will take your advice and map out how the Carbon Monoxide detector
works using the DMM. Thanks a million!!!

Jean-Marie

Terry Pinnell <terrypinDELETE@THESEdial.pipex.com> wrote in message news:<tbf1p0p72ugo0nk4m8c508b8170j8qqnlu@4ax.com>...
Pity there are no such 'extension terminals' available on your units;
(I'm guessing that some models now offer that convenience?)

Anyway, it should be easy enough to do what you want using the direct
wiring approach that you propose, i.e. to end up with a circuit that
closes a normally-open switch which can use trigger your house alarm.
(Or opens a normally-closed switch; you need to check which your alarm
requires.)

Rather than wire across the LED, it would simplify matters if you
could find an accessible connection point which would be 0V when
inactive and 3.5 to 4.5V when active. So I'd make that the first step.
The other connection point should be permanently 0V, i.e. the negative
battery terminal, or a point directly connected to it.

If you can find such a pair of connections, then you can use a circuit
like the one at the top here:
http://www.terrypin.dial.pipex.com/Images/Smoke1.gif

If any of the smoke detectors is activated, the relay is also
activated and the required switching of the house alarm occurs.

If you *can't* find such a 'full range' connection point, before
modifying that suggested circuit it's a good idea to establish which
of various circuit switching arrangements your smoke detector adopts.
I've illustrated 4 examples in the lower diagram, showing the active
and inactive states for each.

You've measured voltage across the LED, so these distinctions won't
have been apparent. If instead you connect the negative lead of your
DMM to the negative terminal of the battery (or any convenient wire
directly connected to it), any measurements you make with the positive
DMM lead will be *relative to 0V. So your DMM will give the same
results as I've shown on the diagram. A little careful experiment will
now quickly establish how your detector is working. Alternatively, you
could remove the battery and measure resistances instead. If it comes
to that, report back and we'll see if any changes are needed.
 
Mission Accomplished! I have a CO Detector Wirelessly Sending Out
Alarm Status

I finally got the battery operated Carbon Monoxide detector to also
send a trigger to the house alarm system!

I want to thank everyone who pointed me in the right directoion and
also those that came up with novel ways of making this work.

Here is the setup:

I have already in place in my single family home hardwired
interconnected smoke alarms that are also hardwired to my monitored
alarm system. What I do not have is any Carbon Monoxide detectors. I
found very nice battery operated Carbon Monoxide detectors at "Home
Depot" that would work great as standalone units. I wanted to have
these nice battery operated Carbon Monoxide detectors also fault
independent zones on my monitored alarm system.

My alarm system has wireless contact closure transmitters. If the
wireless transmitters detect a contact closure on the screw terminals
it sends a zone faulted alarm to the alarm system.

The battery operated Carbon Monoxide detectors have two LEDs on the
face, one that blinks every 30 seconds to indicate normal operation
and one that is RED that ONLY turns on in an alarm condition.

I took the PCB out of the battery operated Carbon Monoxide detector
(it snaps right out) and soldered 2 – 24 Gauge, 12 inch wires onto the
anode and cathode of the red LED on the back side of the PCB.

With my voltmeter I saw that the voltage across the red LED when the
battery operated Carbon Monoxide detector when into an alarm condition
was 1.7 – 1.9 Volts. The LED would also flash rapidly because the
voltage would go on and off. In other words the LED would stay fully
lit if it always received the 1.7V and would only turn off when no
voltage was present.

Here is what I did to get contact closure from the voltage across the
red LED.

With the help of many people here:

1 – I ran the two small wires I had soldered to the battery operated
Carbon Monoxide detector to a breadboard.

2 – I used an external 9V battery run to a voltage regulator that
dropped the Voltage to 5V out

3 – From there I went to a NPN transistor and resistor on the base
leg.

4- between the emitter and collector I want to another NPN transistor
that was the switch for a 555 timer circuit

5 – The 555 Timer then has wired small 5V reed relay with diodes
across the coil. I also used a 1 mega ohm resistor so the 555 would
hold the relay closed for about 16 seconds.

Now when the battery operated Carbon Monoxide detector goes off and
the red LED flashes, the reed relay closes for 16 seconds and does not
care about the flashing nature of the red LED, it stays latched for 16
seconds as soon as the first 1.7V hits the NPN transistor.

I was amazed that all this really worked!!!! Now the hard part.

I want to put all this circuitry in little project boxed but I have
never soldered to a circuit board. There are lots of junction points
and I worried that I may burn many of the components trying to solder
all this together. Any advice?

Here are the 2 circuits I put togher to make all this work:
http://www.aaroncake.net/circuits/relaytim.htm
http://www1.electusdistribution.com.au/images_uploaded/relaydrv.pdf

Thanks again to all those that helped me!
Jean-Marie Vaneskahian
jean@vaneskahian.com
 

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