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"noname" wrote:
"Nico Coesel" wrote in message ... I'm pretty sure that it won't work that simple. There are other factors at play that make controlling things with a telephone a lot harder to achieve than you think... For everyone's safety I'm not going into the details. You could, only there are no details. piezoelectric one, since with a piezo the circuit would differ slightly. A reed relay could do the switching. Using an NPN, the circuit would look like this: Negative ground, connected with ringer's "-", to battery "-" and through a forward-biased shottky to the emitter. The transistor's base connected through a 2K2 resistor to battery "+". Base also connected to diode "+", while diode "-" is connected to ringer "+". Collector through relay coil to battery "+", a capacitor across the relay coil. That's it. The relay contacts can be used to switch on a lamp, connected to the same battery and placed so that the hearing-impaired person can easily see it. Note to hearing-impaired preople: this circuit may not always work, it depends on the type of ringer and on the volume setting. I did not test it with any ringers either, but I think many old-style ones should do. Way too complicated and it still doesn't work reliably. I've used electronic kitchen timers -which basically have the same circuitry- in numerous devices (Eprom erasers, etching tanks, UV exposure units, etc, etc) but this method is too unreliable for anything that needs a 100% predictive trigger. -- Reply to nico@nctdevpuntnl (punt=.) Bedrijven en winkels vindt U op www.adresboekje.nl |
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