Creating a Timing Circuit (LM555) with Adjustable T1 & T2

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The discussion focuses on creating a timing circuit using the LM555 chip, with the goal of achieving adjustable output times T1 and T2, specifically 15 minutes and 45 minutes, respectively. The user seeks to understand the circuit design and equations involved, aiming for continuous adjustments using variable components. While the LM555 can be used for long timing intervals, some participants suggest that a digital oscillator, such as the 74HC4060, may provide better variability and reliability for such extended durations. Experiences shared include successfully modifying a 555 timer to achieve longer timing intervals, demonstrating its potential despite the challenges. Overall, the conversation emphasizes the importance of understanding circuit fundamentals while exploring both analog and digital solutions.
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Hello all,

I'm trying to make a circuit with the following properties:

1) output at +V for a time T1
2) output at 0 for a time T2
repeat indefinitely
**also, whenever contact is made between two points, I would like the circuit to jump to state 2 (contact would only be made when the system is in state 1)

It would be good if I can adjust T1 and T2 continuously, i.e. with a variable capacitor and/or potentiometer. T1 should be about 15 minutes and T2 should be about 45 minutes, but I want to understand the circuit enough to be able to make adjustments myself. Equations would be very helpful:)

I think I might be able to use the http://www.national.com/ds/LM/LM555.pdf" chip, but I'm not exactly sure how to set these up. Voltage should be between 5V-15V or so.

Thanks for your help,
Joe
 
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Thanks, that site looks very helpful. I'm reading through it now.

Joe
 
JO3 said:
It would be good if I can adjust T1 and T2 continuously, i.e. with a variable capacitor and/or potentiometer. T1 should be about 15 minutes and T2 should be about 45 minutes, but I want to understand the circuit enough to be able to make adjustments myself. Equations would be very helpful:)

Those are pretty long times to be trying to use a 555 analog timer circuit. A better solution would be to use a digital oscillator (based on a 32kHz watch crystal, for example), with divider circuits and a little logic to give you the variability you want. Check out the 74HC4060 IC and its app notes, for example.
 
WOW! I thought I was pushing the envelope timing out to around 10 minutes with a 555.
 
I got one to go to 40 minutes. It's in a coffee-cup heater, the heater shuts off after the 555 says it's time.

The heater circuit originally timed out at 20 minutes. I opened it up, changed a 5M resistor to 10M, and now it's 40 minutes.
 
I've had them work for long times also. Nice big caps.
I think that the 555 is a good way to get your feet wet in circuit building.
 

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