Need some help: smoke and sparks from my 555 chip... oi.
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Need some help: smoke and sparks from my 555 chip... oi.
I followed the instructions on this page: http://www.geocities.com/SiliconValley/2072/proj2.htm
The LED I hooked up lit, but did not blink. I ran 5v to the chip, and within a second had smoke and popping sounds coming from it.
Clearly I did something wrong. Well, lots of stuff.
Here's what I did:
I did NOT use a circuitboard, instead 'extending' the pins by soldering an inch of wire to each.
I connected the power directly to the #8 and #4 pins. I connected the resistors to the ends of the wires I soldered on (one all the way to the outside of the #8 and #7 wires, and the resitor to #7 and #6 inboard of that). The capacitor was wired inboard both resistors. I hooked the + lead of the LED to the #3 and put another resistor between the - lead and the ground #1 pin. I taped the pins to make sure that none of them were touching despite the solder and extra wire.
Anyone have any ideas why it fried?
I could take a picture, but it really is a mess. I did it this way because my circuitboards haven't arrived yet and I wanted to see if I could follow basic instructions. Clearly I can't.
So when I do get my boards in, I'm hoping not to fry everything. I have a bunch of 4060 chips ready to go. I may order a bunch of 555s as well for their smaller size.
The LED I hooked up lit, but did not blink. I ran 5v to the chip, and within a second had smoke and popping sounds coming from it.
Clearly I did something wrong. Well, lots of stuff.
Here's what I did:
I did NOT use a circuitboard, instead 'extending' the pins by soldering an inch of wire to each.
I connected the power directly to the #8 and #4 pins. I connected the resistors to the ends of the wires I soldered on (one all the way to the outside of the #8 and #7 wires, and the resitor to #7 and #6 inboard of that). The capacitor was wired inboard both resistors. I hooked the + lead of the LED to the #3 and put another resistor between the - lead and the ground #1 pin. I taped the pins to make sure that none of them were touching despite the solder and extra wire.
Anyone have any ideas why it fried?
I could take a picture, but it really is a mess. I did it this way because my circuitboards haven't arrived yet and I wanted to see if I could follow basic instructions. Clearly I can't.
So when I do get my boards in, I'm hoping not to fry everything. I have a bunch of 4060 chips ready to go. I may order a bunch of 555s as well for their smaller size.
I am not a number.
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Its possible that you had leads or wires touching (shorting). Fortunately 555 chips are dirt cheap. And if you insist on buying from Radio Schmuck get yourself a solderless breadboard on which you can build you circuit, modify it, and smoke check it before you goe through the hassle of building the real thing and watching it fail the first time you power it up.
Also, if your power supply doesn't have one, install an in-line fuse.
Also, if your power supply doesn't have one, install an in-line fuse.
When better multistators are built, they'll be built by Thetatronic Overdrive.
A dvision of Orion Astromotive, Inc.
A dvision of Orion Astromotive, Inc.
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Breadboards
The breadboard I was refering to is the white plastic type where you plug in your parts and jumper wires to test your circuit. Not intended for actual use in your model.
You want to use in you model is the fiberglass type with the grid pattern of .10 spaced holes, copper pads and power/ground traces.
You want to use in you model is the fiberglass type with the grid pattern of .10 spaced holes, copper pads and power/ground traces.
When better multistators are built, they'll be built by Thetatronic Overdrive.
A dvision of Orion Astromotive, Inc.
A dvision of Orion Astromotive, Inc.
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Picture of what one looks like with components on it for referenceNo_6 wrote:Ahhhhh! I'll have to order one of those.
Bussard Test
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