Electronic combination lock


Posted on Oct 31, 2012

When button S12 (#) is pressed, a positive voltage fed through Rl appears at the base of transistor Ql, turning it on. When Ql is conducting, pin 1 of Ul is brought to ground 0ow) or the battery's negative terminal. With pin 1 low, two things occur: Pin 8 of Ul goes high ( + 9 volts dc), turning on LED 1—indicating that the circuit has been armed—and pin 13 goes from high to low. Transistor Q2 requires a low signal or negative voltage on its base in order to conduct. It also needs a positive voltage on its emitter and a negative voltage on the collector. As long as the door switch (SI 5) remains open (with the door itself closed), Q2's emitter will not receive the necessary positive voltage.


Electronic combination lock
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If, however, an unauthorized person opens the door, thus closing switch SI5 and placing a positive voltage on the emitter of Ql, the following sequence occurs: Transistor Q2 conducts, receiving the necessary biasing current through a current-divider network consisting of resistors R3 and R4. As Q2 conducts, a voltage drop is developed across the voltage dividers made up of resistors R5 and R6. With R5 at 10,000 ohms and R6 at 1000 ohms, approximately one volt appears at the gate of SCR1. That's enough voltage to trigger the SCR's gate.




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