LED voltage bar graph

Guest
I'd like to have a "bar graph" of LEDs tell me how far along my 6V SLA
is on its charging.

I saw this, but I think it's overkill:
http://www.national.com/mpf/LM/LM3916.html
http://dan.pfeiffer.net/train/vmeter.htm

5 LEDs would be plenty.

Any suggestions for a discrete version of the LED voltage bar graph?
I'd like to tune it from 6.0V (first LED) to 6.8V (fifth LED) in
increments of 0.2V.

It's not particularly important whether all preceding LEDs are lit, or
if just the Nth LED is lit, if this simplifies the circuit at all.
(For example, if voltage is 6.6V, corresponding to the 4th LED, it's
ok if only the 4th LED is lit, and not LEDs 1 through 4, if this makes
design easier.)

Thanks,

Michael
 
<mrdarrett@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:ced146b4-df21-4033-a575-dc0ecb8bbc94@h11g2000prf.googlegroups.com...
I'd like to have a "bar graph" of LEDs tell me how far along my 6V SLA
is on its charging.

I saw this, but I think it's overkill:
http://www.national.com/mpf/LM/LM3916.html
http://dan.pfeiffer.net/train/vmeter.htm

5 LEDs would be plenty.

Any suggestions for a discrete version of the LED voltage bar graph?
I'd like to tune it from 6.0V (first LED) to 6.8V (fifth LED) in
increments of 0.2V.

It's not particularly important whether all preceding LEDs are lit, or
if just the Nth LED is lit, if this simplifies the circuit at all.
(For example, if voltage is 6.6V, corresponding to the 4th LED, it's
ok if only the 4th LED is lit, and not LEDs 1 through 4, if this makes
design easier.)

Thanks,

Michael

If you have a voltage reference, you can easily scale voltages so that a
couple of quad comparators, along with 100k trimmers can be used to do
something like this.

Each stage is simple, it's an open collector comparator with the - input at
the range, the + input at the battery voltage, and the output connected to a
voltage source through a resistor and LED.



Vbatt 12V
| |\| |
6.8V .-------)------|-\ ___ LED |
| | | >--|___|-->|-----o
.-. o------|+/ 1k |
10k | | | |/| |
| | | |
'-' | |
| | |\| |
o-------)------|-\ ___ LED |
| | | >--|___|-->|-----o
.-. o------|+/ 1k |
10k | | | |/| |
| | | |
'-' | |
| | |\| |
o-------)------|-\ ___ LED |
| | | >--|___|-->|-----)
.-. o------|+/ 1k |
10k | | | |/| |
| | | |
'-' | |
| | |\| |
o-------)------|-\ ___ LED |
| | | >--|___|-->|-----o
.-. o------|+/ 1k |
10k | | | |/| |
| | | |
'-' | |
| | |\| |
6.0V '-------)------|-\ ___ LED |
| | >--|___|-->|-----'
'------|+/ 1k
|/|
(created by AACircuit v1.28.6 beta 04/19/05 www.tech-chat.de)

You'll need to figure out how to get 6V, 6.8V, and 12V. You can use LM324s
instead of comparators, and use the extra three opamps to buffer voltage
dividers. If you have a 12V reference, like an LM7812, that would make this
easier.

Regards,
Bob Monsen
 
<mrdarrett@gmail.com>

I'd like to have a "bar graph" of LEDs tell me how far along my 6V SLA
is on its charging.

** So YOU still refuse to use the proper charge method.

Constant voltage @ 13.8 volts.

Then the current drops over the charge cycle.




........ Phil
 
On 3ÔÂ24ČŐ, ÉĎÎç8Ęą25ˇÖ, mrdarr...@gmail.com wrote:
I'd like to have a "bar graph" of LEDs tell me how far along my 6V SLA
is on its charging.

I saw this, but I think it's overkill:http://www.national.com/mpf/LM/LM3916.htmlhttp://dan.pfeiffer.net/train/vmeter.htm

5 LEDs would be plenty.

Any suggestions for a discrete version of the LED voltage bar graph?
I'd like to tune it from 6.0V (first LED) to 6.8V (fifth LED) in
increments of 0.2V.

It's not particularly important whether all preceding LEDs are lit, or
if just the Nth LED is lit, if this simplifies the circuit at all.
(For example, if voltage is 6.6V, corresponding to the 4th LED, it's
ok if only the 4th LED is lit, and not LEDs 1 through 4, if this makes
design easier.)

Thanks,

Michael


Do you want access to China's massive pool of electronic
manufacturers... but lack the time to contact suppliers, negotiate
contracts, arrange shipping or monitor product quality? Don't worry -
Let seriouswholesale deal with all that for you.

*Check out the huge range of Gadgets, MP3 / MP4 Players, Car DVD /
Audio, and Computer Accessories now by visiting the online wholesale
catalog at seriouswholesale. com You'll have peace of mind thanks to
the seriouswholesale Quality Control, 12-month Warranty on all
products, and easy secure payment by credit card through Paypal.

Selling on eBay or your own online store? Send products direct from
our warehouse to your customers using our unique drop-shipping
service. You can profit by selling hundreds of different products,
without holding any of your own inventory! Any questions you have will
be answered by the seriouswholesale English-speaking customer support
team... Their aim is to make your China electronics importing business
easier to run than ever before.

Welcome to http://www.seriouswholesale.com.

seriouswholesale - Buy from the source, profit without the hassle.

- 12 Months Warranty - No minimum order restrictions - Drop-shipping
with no additional fee - Pay by safely by PayPal seriouswholesale
Wholesale Co., Ltd.: Chinas original and best online electronics
wholesaler & drop-shipper: seriouswholesale. com
 
mrdarrett@gmail.com wrote:

On Mar 23, 8:34 pm, "Phil Allison" <philalli...@tpg.com.au> wrote:
mrdarr...@gmail.com

I'd like to have a "bar graph" of LEDs tell me how far along my 6V SLA
is on its charging.

** So YOU still refuse to use the proper charge method.

Constant voltage @ 13.8 volts.

Then the current drops over the charge cycle.

....... Phil

13.8 volts into a 6V SLA... ha ha ha. You're a hoot.
Obviously 6.9V for a 6V battery.


Actually I set my LM317T to 6.75V, and I just want to know how long it
will take for the battery to float up to that.
Phil is right that a simple voltmeter is not a good indicator of the level of
charge, not least because the terminal voltage will rise whilst being charged
by varying degrees.

Graham
 
On Mar 23, 8:34 pm, "Phil Allison" <philalli...@tpg.com.au> wrote:
mrdarr...@gmail.com

I'd like to have a "bar graph" of LEDs tell me how far along my 6V SLA
is on its charging.

** So YOU still refuse to use the proper charge method.

Constant voltage @ 13.8 volts.

Then the current drops over the charge cycle.

....... Phil


13.8 volts into a 6V SLA... ha ha ha. You're a hoot.

Actually I set my LM317T to 6.75V, and I just want to know how long it
will take for the battery to float up to that.

Michael
 
mrdarrett@gmail.com wrote:

Eeyore wrote:
mrdarr...@gmail.com wrote:
"Phil Allison" <philalli...@tpg.com.au> wrote:
mrdarr...@gmail.com

I'd like to have a "bar graph" of LEDs tell me how far along my 6V SLA
is on its charging.

** So YOU still refuse to use the proper charge method.

Constant voltage @ 13.8 volts.

Then the current drops over the charge cycle.

....... Phil

13.8 volts into a 6V SLA... ha ha ha. You're a hoot.

Obviously 6.9V for a 6V battery.

Yeah I know, I was just giving him a hard time. ;-)

Actually I set my LM317T to 6.75V, and I just want to know how long it
will take for the battery to float up to that.

Phil is right that a simple voltmeter is not a good indicator of the level of
charge, not least because the terminal voltage will rise whilst being charged
by varying degrees.

Graham

Good point. I did notice that the battery would go up from its
original voltage to the charge voltage within a couple of minutes.

So if I've got a 10 A-h battery, and it charges at float at 500 mA, it
should charge for 20 hours at float to receive a full charge?
More like 30 hours actually since the process isn't 100% efficient. Also, the
charge rate will taper off with time.

Graham
 
On Mar 24, 8:30 am, Eeyore <rabbitsfriendsandrelati...@hotmail.com>
wrote:
mrdarr...@gmail.com wrote:
On Mar 23, 8:34 pm, "Phil Allison" <philalli...@tpg.com.au> wrote:
mrdarr...@gmail.com

I'd like to have a "bar graph" of LEDs tell me how far along my 6V SLA
is on its charging.

** So YOU still refuse to use the proper charge method.

Constant voltage @ 13.8 volts.

Then the current drops over the charge cycle.

....... Phil

13.8 volts into a 6V SLA... ha ha ha. You're a hoot.

Obviously 6.9V for a 6V battery.

Yeah I know, I was just giving him a hard time. ;-)


Actually I set my LM317T to 6.75V, and I just want to know how long it
will take for the battery to float up to that.

Phil is right that a simple voltmeter is not a good indicator of the level of
charge, not least because the terminal voltage will rise whilst being charged
by varying degrees.

Graham

Good point. I did notice that the battery would go up from its
original voltage to the charge voltage within a couple of minutes.

So if I've got a 10 A-h battery, and it charges at float at 500 mA, it
should charge for 20 hours at float to receive a full charge?

Michael
 
On Mon, 24 Mar 2008 09:21:59 -0700 (PDT), mrdarrett@gmail.com wrote:

On Mar 24, 8:30 am, Eeyore <rabbitsfriendsandrelati...@hotmail.com
wrote:
mrdarr...@gmail.com wrote:
On Mar 23, 8:34 pm, "Phil Allison" <philalli...@tpg.com.au> wrote:
mrdarr...@gmail.com

I'd like to have a "bar graph" of LEDs tell me how far along my 6V SLA
is on its charging.

** So YOU still refuse to use the proper charge method.

Constant voltage @ 13.8 volts.

Then the current drops over the charge cycle.

....... Phil

13.8 volts into a 6V SLA... ha ha ha. You're a hoot.

Obviously 6.9V for a 6V battery.


Yeah I know, I was just giving him a hard time. ;-)


Actually I set my LM317T to 6.75V, and I just want to know how long it
will take for the battery to float up to that.

Phil is right that a simple voltmeter is not a good indicator of the level of
charge, not least because the terminal voltage will rise whilst being charged
by varying degrees.

Graham


Good point. I did notice that the battery would go up from its
original voltage to the charge voltage within a couple of minutes.

So if I've got a 10 A-h battery, and it charges at float at 500 mA, it
should charge for 20 hours at float to receive a full charge?
---
The proper way to charge a sealed lead-acid battery is to limit the
initial charge current to that value specified by the manufacturer
while monitoring the voltage across the battery. Once the battery
voltage has risen to to the value specified by the manufacturer, then
that voltage should be maintained until the charging current drops to
the value specified by the manufacturer. Then, depending on whether
the battery will be used in cyclic or float mode, one of two actions
should be taken.

Here, From:

http://www.power-sonic.com/site/doc/prod/73.pdf

For a 12AH SLA:

Charging
Cycle Applications: Limit initial current to 3.6A. Charge until
battery voltage (under charge) reaches 7.20 to 7.35 volts at 68°F
(20°C).

Hold at 7.20 to 7.35 volts until current drops to under 120mA. Battery
is fully charged under these conditions, and charger should be
disconnected or switched to “float” voltage.

“Float” or “Stand-By” Service: Hold battery across constant voltage
source of 6.75 to 6.90 volts continuously. When held at this voltage,
the battery will seek its own current level and maintain itself in a
fully charged condition.
 
John Fields wrote:

mrdarrett@gmail.com wrote:
Eeyore >wrote:
mrdarr...@gmail.com wrote:
On Mar 23, 8:34 pm, "Phil Allison" <philalli...@tpg.com.au> wrote:
mrdarr...@gmail.com

I'd like to have a "bar graph" of LEDs tell me how far along my 6V SLA
is on its charging.

** So YOU still refuse to use the proper charge method.

Constant voltage @ 13.8 volts.

Then the current drops over the charge cycle.

....... Phil

13.8 volts into a 6V SLA... ha ha ha. You're a hoot.

Obviously 6.9V for a 6V battery.


Yeah I know, I was just giving him a hard time. ;-)


Actually I set my LM317T to 6.75V, and I just want to know how long it
will take for the battery to float up to that.

Phil is right that a simple voltmeter is not a good indicator of the level of
charge, not least because the terminal voltage will rise whilst being charged
by varying degrees.

Graham


Good point. I did notice that the battery would go up from its
original voltage to the charge voltage within a couple of minutes.

So if I've got a 10 A-h battery, and it charges at float at 500 mA, it
should charge for 20 hours at float to receive a full charge?

---
The proper way to charge a sealed lead-acid battery is to limit the
initial charge current to that value specified by the manufacturer
while monitoring the voltage across the battery. Once the battery
voltage has risen to to the value specified by the manufacturer, then
that voltage should be maintained until the charging current drops to
the value specified by the manufacturer. Then, depending on whether
the battery will be used in cyclic or float mode, one of two actions
should be taken.

Here, From:

http://www.power-sonic.com/site/doc/prod/73.pdf

For a 12AH SLA:

Charging
Cycle Applications: Limit initial current to 3.6A. Charge until
battery voltage (under charge) reaches 7.20 to 7.35 volts at 68°F
(20°C).

Hold at 7.20 to 7.35 volts until current drops to under 120mA. Battery
is fully charged under these conditions, and charger should be
disconnected or switched to “float” voltage.

“Float” or “Stand-By” Service: Hold battery across constant voltage
source of 6.75 to 6.90 volts continuously. When held at this voltage,
the battery will seek its own current level and maintain itself in a
fully charged condition.
I completely concur.

In this instance the OP could perhaps organise a suitable current limit around his
regulator.

Graham
 
On 3ÔÂ24ČŐ, ÉĎÎç8Ęą25ˇÖ, mrdarr...@gmail.com wrote:
I'd like to have a "bar graph" of LEDs tell me how far along my 6V SLA
is on its charging.

I saw this, but I think it's overkill:http://www.national.com/mpf/LM/LM3916.htmlhttp://dan.pfeiffer.net/train/vmeter.htm

5 LEDs would be plenty.

Any suggestions for a discrete version of the LED voltage bar graph?
I'd like to tune it from 6.0V (first LED) to 6.8V (fifth LED) in
increments of 0.2V.

It's not particularly important whether all preceding LEDs are lit, or
if just the Nth LED is lit, if this simplifies the circuit at all.
(For example, if voltage is 6.6V, corresponding to the 4th LED, it's
ok if only the 4th LED is lit, and not LEDs 1 through 4, if this makes
design easier.)

Thanks,

Michael


Do you want access to China's massive pool of electronic
manufacturers... but lack the time to contact suppliers, negotiate
contracts, arrange shipping or monitor product quality? Don't worry -
Let seriouswholesale deal with all that for you.

*Check out the huge range of Gadgets, MP3 / MP4 Players, Car DVD /
Audio, and Computer Accessories now by visiting the online wholesale
catalog at seriouswholesale. com You'll have peace of mind thanks to
the seriouswholesale Quality Control, 12-month Warranty on all
products, and easy secure payment by credit card through Paypal.

Selling on eBay or your own online store? Send products direct from
our warehouse to your customers using our unique drop-shipping
service. You can profit by selling hundreds of different products,
without holding any of your own inventory! Any questions you have will
be answered by the seriouswholesale English-speaking customer support
team... Their aim is to make your China electronics importing business
easier to run than ever before.

Welcome to http://www.seriouswholesale.com.

seriouswholesale - Buy from the source, profit without the hassle.

- 12 Months Warranty - No minimum order restrictions - Drop-shipping
with no additional fee - Pay by safely by PayPal seriouswholesale
Wholesale Co., Ltd.: Chinas original and best online electronics
wholesaler & drop-shipper: seriouswholesale. com
 
On Mar 24, 9:52 am, John Fields <jfie...@austininstruments.com> wrote:
On Mon, 24 Mar 2008 09:21:59 -0700 (PDT), mrdarr...@gmail.com wrote:
On Mar 24, 8:30 am, Eeyore <rabbitsfriendsandrelati...@hotmail.com
wrote:
mrdarr...@gmail.com wrote:
On Mar 23, 8:34 pm, "Phil Allison" <philalli...@tpg.com.au> wrote:
mrdarr...@gmail.com

I'd like to have a "bar graph" of LEDs tell me how far along my 6V SLA
is on its charging.

** So YOU still refuse to use the proper charge method.

Constant voltage @ 13.8 volts.

Then the current drops over the charge cycle.

....... Phil

13.8 volts into a 6V SLA... ha ha ha. You're a hoot.

Obviously 6.9V for a 6V battery.

Yeah I know, I was just giving him a hard time. ;-)

Actually I set my LM317T to 6.75V, and I just want to know how long it
will take for the battery to float up to that.

Phil is right that a simple voltmeter is not a good indicator of the level of
charge, not least because the terminal voltage will rise whilst being charged
by varying degrees.

Graham

Good point. I did notice that the battery would go up from its
original voltage to the charge voltage within a couple of minutes.

So if I've got a 10 A-h battery, and it charges at float at 500 mA, it
should charge for 20 hours at float to receive a full charge?

---
The proper way to charge a sealed lead-acid battery is to limit the
initial charge current to that value specified by the manufacturer
while monitoring the voltage across the battery. Once the battery
voltage has risen to to the value specified by the manufacturer, then
that voltage should be maintained until the charging current drops to
the value specified by the manufacturer. Then, depending on whether
the battery will be used in cyclic or float mode, one of two actions
should be taken.

Here, From:

http://www.power-sonic.com/site/doc/prod/73.pdf

For a 12AH SLA:

Charging
Cycle Applications: Limit initial current to 3.6A. Charge until
battery voltage (under charge) reaches 7.20 to 7.35 volts at 68°F
(20°C).

Hold at 7.20 to 7.35 volts until current drops to under 120mA. Battery
is fully charged under these conditions, and charger should be
disconnected or switched to "float" voltage.

"Float" or "Stand-By" Service: Hold battery across constant voltage
source of 6.75 to 6.90 volts continuously. When held at this voltage,
the battery will seek its own current level and maintain itself in a
fully charged condition.

Thanks a bunch.

6.75V not etched in stone... 6.75 to 6.90 seems more reasonable.

Michael
 

Welcome to EDABoard.com

Sponsor

Back
Top