| Electronics > Projects, Designs, and Technical Stuff |
| Constant Freq, Variable Duty |
| (1/1) |
| chinook_eng:
Hello everyone, first time to the forum, but I need help! I'd like to design in hardware a static frequency variable duty PWM generator and running into some issues. My current design consists of a 555 timer configured in astable operation generating a 50% duty 150Hz square wave which is driving the trigger on another 555 timer configured for for monostable operation. I understand that I can vary the duty this way using a pot. Ok, onto my constraints... I am required to use 3 potentiometers; 1 to set the lower duty cycle limit, 1 to set the upper duty cycle limit, and 1 to vary the duty between the 2 limits. I know i could easily accomplish this using a micro, but I am trying to have everything in hardware. No code. Any suggestions? Thanks |
| duak:
I would start with a triangle wave of the desired frequency. A comparator would have one input driven by the tri-wave and the other from the wiper of pot RV1. One end of RV1 would be driven by a buffered variable voltage with a maximum voltage corresponding to the positive peak voltage of the tri-wave set by RV2. Likewise the other end of RV1 would be driven by a buffered variable voltage corresponding to the negative peak voltage of the tri-wave and set by RV3. If this isn't clear, I can try to sketch it out but it'll take some time. |
| chinook_eng:
Ok, that sounds reasonable. Itd be like adding hysteresis to a comparator only the upper and lower bounds and reference would all be independently varied. Does that sound about right? |
| chinook_eng:
Works like a beaut. Thanks for the help duak! |
| Navigation |
| Message Index |