Guest
I would like to build an analog volume meter (moving needle type)
using moving needle gauges like this
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:VU_Meter.jpg
scavenged from a dead mixer's VU meter.
It would plug into the headphone jack on a set of computer speakers
and monitor the right/left sound volumes independently.
Can anyone point me to a good website or book with schematics or plans
on building this?
PS I would also be interested in building a frequency meter (also
would be plugged into computer speakers and display the pitch/
frequency of a pure sin wave coming from the computer's sound card). I
got several replies but they were pretty technical and I have not
found any complete plans for such a device. If any can suggest a good
web site or book that would be great. Thanks
comparator fires the oneshot, the cap integrates the pulses, and the
meter shows the freq. Cal it with sine waves.... no harmonics.
linnix:
Or a $2 micro averaging the DCT, FFT or XYZ (forgot the name of that
spectral analyser).
whit3rd:
Phase-lock loops like 74HC4046 can lock onto an audio
frequency, and the follower in it has an output voltage
proportional to frequency. That's about $0.60 from your budget;
a good analog moving-needle meter will suck up the rest of it.
using moving needle gauges like this
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:VU_Meter.jpg
scavenged from a dead mixer's VU meter.
It would plug into the headphone jack on a set of computer speakers
and monitor the right/left sound volumes independently.
Can anyone point me to a good website or book with schematics or plans
on building this?
PS I would also be interested in building a frequency meter (also
would be plugged into computer speakers and display the pitch/
frequency of a pure sin wave coming from the computer's sound card). I
got several replies but they were pretty technical and I have not
found any complete plans for such a device. If any can suggest a good
web site or book that would be great. Thanks
capacitor, and a meter on a trimpot. Every zero crossing, theBobG:
That's a tachometer. A lo pass filter, a comparator, a oneshot, a
comparator fires the oneshot, the cap integrates the pulses, and the
meter shows the freq. Cal it with sine waves.... no harmonics.
linnix:
Or a $2 micro averaging the DCT, FFT or XYZ (forgot the name of that
spectral analyser).
whit3rd:
Phase-lock loops like 74HC4046 can lock onto an audio
frequency, and the follower in it has an output voltage
proportional to frequency. That's about $0.60 from your budget;
a good analog moving-needle meter will suck up the rest of it.