Help with manipulating a digital signal

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A software engineer is seeking assistance with delaying a digital signal from a hall sensor used for timing ignition sparks in an automotive application. The goal is to delay the signal without altering its amplitude or frequency, ideally by a few milliseconds. Suggestions include using a capacitor setup or a basic memory chip, but concerns arise about preserving the square wave properties of the signal. The 555 timer IC is proposed as a potential solution for achieving the desired delay while maintaining signal integrity. The discussion emphasizes the need for a straightforward approach using either discrete components or simple integrated circuits.
Terry335
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Hi everyone, software engineer here that needs help with a basic EE project for an automotive application.

I have a digital hall sensor that goes high (+2v) once per engine revolution. This high signal is used to time the ignition spark, and its frequency is used to determine the engine RPM.

Here is the challenge: I need to slightly delay this signal using discrete components, without significantly altering the amplitude or frequency. I want to basically shift the entire curve back a millisecond or two or twenty (TBD).

If this isn't possible with discrete components, I need the simplest IC solution.

Any clues would be much appreciated!

Thanks,

Terry
 
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Welcome to PF, Terry.
I really know nothing about electronics in general, and certainly nothing about this specifc application. I'm wondering, though, if you couldn't just use the same system (whatever it is) that bands use for the 'echo' effect. It's pretty much just a matter of capturing the signal, storing it, and then releasing it. Wouldn't a capacitor setup do that? Or maybe a basic memory chip?
 
Danger said:
Welcome to PF, Terry.
I really know nothing about electronics in general, and certainly nothing about this specifc application. I'm wondering, though, if you couldn't just use the same system (whatever it is) that bands use for the 'echo' effect. It's pretty much just a matter of capturing the signal, storing it, and then releasing it. Wouldn't a capacitor setup do that? Or maybe a basic memory chip?

The problem with a capacitor is that I would lose the square properties of the signal, which I need to preserve. Good idea though, I was thinking a capacitor that triggered an op-amp to rebuild the square signal could work, but I am hoping there is an easier way.
 
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This looks like a good application for the 555 timer IC. Check out the http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monostable.

Hope this helps.
 
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