Simple Battery Monitor

Thread Starter

Joster

Joined Jun 12, 2013
95
Hi All!

I want to know when my battery is at 14V. I can use a comparator using a reference voltage to get a change in state on the output when 14V is reached. I need to convert that change in state to a 1 second pulse to drive a mosfet. What circuit do I use? Maybe there is One that will give me a 1 sec pulse when ever there is a change in state from low to high or high to low??

Thanks!

Joster
 

Thread Starter

Joster

Joined Jun 12, 2013
95
ok thanks for responding!

would the astable 555 not just keep giving pulses? I only want a pulse if the output of the comparator changes state. So I need a pulse which is activated by either a rising edge or a falling edge...
 

wayneh

Joined Sep 9, 2010
18,104
A monostable multivibrator is known as a "one shot".

The 555 normally triggers on a negative going edge. I'm trying to recall how to get a state-change pulse. Using another 555 is the brute force solution. I think there's a more elegant approach.
 

Thread Starter

Joster

Joined Jun 12, 2013
95
ok...but the battery is going to hit 14V and keep climbing up until I turn the charger off so the output of the op amp will be high once the battery gets to 14V and then remain high...see what I mean?
 

Thread Starter

Joster

Joined Jun 12, 2013
95
I am connecting it to the input of my alarm system. when the input of the alarm system sees a short I get an email that by battery is charged. So really I just need to short the two terminals of the alarm input together... I was thinking of using a relay for that...hense the mosfet or bjt...
 

Thread Starter

Joster

Joined Jun 12, 2013
95
I need a solid bat ref but a 10V zener across the battery doesn't work like i thought it would...I need a solid vref for the op amp and want to do it from the bat. the bat will be anywhere from 11v to 14v but i need 10v vef. tried two 5v zeners and current limiting resistor...tried without the resistor still no luck...am i going to have to power it off another supply??? hopefully not

thanks
 

Thread Starter

Joster

Joined Jun 12, 2013
95
i thought that i could get a solid 10v reference voltage across the battery with the two 5v zeners and a resistor?
 

Brownout

Joined Jan 10, 2012
2,390
Connect the components in this order: Resistor, Zener, Zener. Like this

V+
R
Z
Z
gnd.

Now take the reference voltage between the resistor and the top zener. You might try a lower value resistor too. Try 300-1k
 
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