Skip to content
  • MySensors
  • OpenHardware.io
  • Categories
  • Recent
  • Tags
  • Popular
Skins
  • Light
  • Brite
  • Cerulean
  • Cosmo
  • Flatly
  • Journal
  • Litera
  • Lumen
  • Lux
  • Materia
  • Minty
  • Morph
  • Pulse
  • Sandstone
  • Simplex
  • Sketchy
  • Spacelab
  • United
  • Yeti
  • Zephyr
  • Dark
  • Cyborg
  • Darkly
  • Quartz
  • Slate
  • Solar
  • Superhero
  • Vapor

  • Default (No Skin)
  • No Skin
Collapse
Brand Logo
  1. Home
  2. Hardware
  3. Piezzo siren/alarm

Piezzo siren/alarm

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Hardware
26 Posts 4 Posters 2.5k Views 4 Watching
  • Oldest to Newest
  • Newest to Oldest
  • Most Votes
Reply
  • Reply as topic
Log in to reply
This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
  • ben999B ben999

    @mfalkvidd oh thanks for quick reply and links.

    A bit off-topic here: would you rather go for a computer version or a portable one ?

    mfalkviddM Offline
    mfalkviddM Offline
    mfalkvidd
    Mod
    wrote on last edited by
    #8

    @ben999 I am not sure I know the difference between portable and computer version, but I'll try to answer anyway. As with most things, it depends on the use case.

    Last weekend I went to a hackathon. I brought my oscilloscope since it doesn't weigh much and doesn't take up much space. Most "real" oscilloscopes would have been too large and heavy to bring, especially since I don't travel by car.

    I usually have a computer when messing with electronics, so I don't mind using the computer's screen instead of a built-in screen. Having the user interface on my computer makes it easy to take screen shots.

    1 Reply Last reply
    1
    • FotoFieberF Offline
      FotoFieberF Offline
      FotoFieber
      Hardware Contributor
      wrote on last edited by
      #9

      For portable usage I have a https://pokitmeter.com/ which is really small and lightweight.

      ben999B 1 Reply Last reply
      1
      • FotoFieberF FotoFieber

        For portable usage I have a https://pokitmeter.com/ which is really small and lightweight.

        ben999B Offline
        ben999B Offline
        ben999
        wrote on last edited by ben999
        #10

        @fotofieber woooooooooooooooow :heart_eyes_cat: :heart_eyes_cat: :heart_eyes_cat:

        I searched last night for something similar (iOS and BT) but couldn't find one

        So i bought a cheap portable one on aliExpress

        https://fr.aliexpress.com/item/JYE-Tech-DSO138-13805K-Mini-Digital-Oscilloscope-DIY-Kit-SMD-Parts-Pre-soldered-Electronic-Learning-Set/32919633946.html?spm=a2g0w.10010108.1000016.1.6349de7cOC8Hnf&isOrigTitle=true

        We're not talking about the same amount of money there...

        But i'm now deeeeeeeeeply in love and will consider PokitMeter for my next workshop toy :heart_eyes:

        Thank you for the link :facepunch: :+1:

        1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • mfalkviddM mfalkvidd

          @ben999 can't you just measure the output signal from the original board?

          ben999B Offline
          ben999B Offline
          ben999
          wrote on last edited by
          #11

          @mfalkvidd Something puzzling me here, can i please borrow your brain for a sec ?

          @bjacobse mentionned that his small piezzo buzzer could take up to 30V...

          So i had a go with my own buzzer and the previous schematic with 1S LiPo up to 6S LiPo (close to 25V) and 440Hz up to 32kHz (max Tone() )

          No change there. Still the same noise i got with a smaller transistor and a 5V power supply.

          Tone() changes the width of the modulation (X scale), so i get different tones.
          Voltage of the power suppy changes the power going through the piezzo disc... but it doesn't get any louder.

          So what is the magic to get a loud buzzer? I shall get my oscilloscope within a month, so until then i keep scratching my head !!

          bjacobseB 1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • ben999B ben999

            @mfalkvidd Something puzzling me here, can i please borrow your brain for a sec ?

            @bjacobse mentionned that his small piezzo buzzer could take up to 30V...

            So i had a go with my own buzzer and the previous schematic with 1S LiPo up to 6S LiPo (close to 25V) and 440Hz up to 32kHz (max Tone() )

            No change there. Still the same noise i got with a smaller transistor and a 5V power supply.

            Tone() changes the width of the modulation (X scale), so i get different tones.
            Voltage of the power suppy changes the power going through the piezzo disc... but it doesn't get any louder.

            So what is the magic to get a loud buzzer? I shall get my oscilloscope within a month, so until then i keep scratching my head !!

            bjacobseB Offline
            bjacobseB Offline
            bjacobse
            wrote on last edited by
            #12

            @ben999
            I guess you don't hit resonance frequency.
            Why not scavenge a piezo from a smokealarm, then you you know that the circuit is made for resonance frequency.
            BTW I did not write MY piezo is working at 30V, I directed to a piezo that Adafruit is using, and that uses up to 30V - just to correct that I hvae not used the pieo myself

            ben999B 1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • bjacobseB bjacobse

              @ben999
              I guess you don't hit resonance frequency.
              Why not scavenge a piezo from a smokealarm, then you you know that the circuit is made for resonance frequency.
              BTW I did not write MY piezo is working at 30V, I directed to a piezo that Adafruit is using, and that uses up to 30V - just to correct that I hvae not used the pieo myself

              ben999B Offline
              ben999B Offline
              ben999
              wrote on last edited by
              #13

              @bjacobse thanks for clarification :smile:

              No smoke came out of mine under 25V DC so i guess it's ok

              And yes, i shall cut open an old smoke alarm, you're right.

              Thanks a lot

              bjacobseB 1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • ben999B ben999

                @bjacobse thanks for clarification :smile:

                No smoke came out of mine under 25V DC so i guess it's ok

                And yes, i shall cut open an old smoke alarm, you're right.

                Thanks a lot

                bjacobseB Offline
                bjacobseB Offline
                bjacobse
                wrote on last edited by
                #14

                @ben999
                But also look careful at the smokealarm PCB, as you might be able to reuse this to ensure that you are using resonance frequency

                1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • FotoFieberF Offline
                  FotoFieberF Offline
                  FotoFieber
                  Hardware Contributor
                  wrote on last edited by FotoFieber
                  #15

                  AFAIK the piezo acts like a capacitor. If you don't use AC, you may have to discharge it with a parallel resistor or discharge it with a transistor.

                  You could find some useful information on eevblog, e.g. http://www.eevblog.com/forum/projects/how-to-connect-a-piezo-speaker-to-a-microcontroller/

                  toneAC:
                  https://bitbucket.org/teckel12/arduino-toneac/wiki/Home

                  ben999B 1 Reply Last reply
                  1
                  • FotoFieberF FotoFieber

                    AFAIK the piezo acts like a capacitor. If you don't use AC, you may have to discharge it with a parallel resistor or discharge it with a transistor.

                    You could find some useful information on eevblog, e.g. http://www.eevblog.com/forum/projects/how-to-connect-a-piezo-speaker-to-a-microcontroller/

                    toneAC:
                    https://bitbucket.org/teckel12/arduino-toneac/wiki/Home

                    ben999B Offline
                    ben999B Offline
                    ben999
                    wrote on last edited by ben999
                    #16

                    @fotofieber hi thank you for your message

                    I was coming back here to share my findings.... been playing with... ToneAC :joy:

                    Yes you're right, differential drive makes a hell of a difference! each pin of the piezo speaker are connected to its own arduino output (serial resistor on one pin though) that send the same signal in opposition as to get a differential movment.

                    But i don't quite get it :

                    • driving the piezo speaker with up to 25V doesn't improve noise level at all
                    • switching to differential drive @5V (so it's a 10V potential peak-to-peak) opens hell's doors wide open

                    That's the part i dont understand. I'll carry on investigating.

                    Still: noise level is a bit below as compared to same pizeo speaker connected to original alarm enclosure...
                    I might have a go with transistors and try a differential of 2S or 3S LiPo.
                    Also waiting for my oscilloscope to find out!

                    And lastly: ToneAC uses pins 9 and 10... so it's a NO-NO with nRF24 :cry:
                    Enters... ToneAC2. It's inferior (CPU cycle, accuracy, lower freq) in many points except that pins are configurable.

                    More soon... :nerd_face:

                    mfalkviddM FotoFieberF 2 Replies Last reply
                    0
                    • ben999B ben999

                      @fotofieber hi thank you for your message

                      I was coming back here to share my findings.... been playing with... ToneAC :joy:

                      Yes you're right, differential drive makes a hell of a difference! each pin of the piezo speaker are connected to its own arduino output (serial resistor on one pin though) that send the same signal in opposition as to get a differential movment.

                      But i don't quite get it :

                      • driving the piezo speaker with up to 25V doesn't improve noise level at all
                      • switching to differential drive @5V (so it's a 10V potential peak-to-peak) opens hell's doors wide open

                      That's the part i dont understand. I'll carry on investigating.

                      Still: noise level is a bit below as compared to same pizeo speaker connected to original alarm enclosure...
                      I might have a go with transistors and try a differential of 2S or 3S LiPo.
                      Also waiting for my oscilloscope to find out!

                      And lastly: ToneAC uses pins 9 and 10... so it's a NO-NO with nRF24 :cry:
                      Enters... ToneAC2. It's inferior (CPU cycle, accuracy, lower freq) in many points except that pins are configurable.

                      More soon... :nerd_face:

                      mfalkviddM Offline
                      mfalkviddM Offline
                      mfalkvidd
                      Mod
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #17

                      @ben999 nice work, thanks for sharing.

                      To change pins for the nrf24, use the following in your sketch

                      #define MY_RF24_CE_PIN 7
                      #define MY_RF24_CS_PIN 8
                      
                      ben999B 1 Reply Last reply
                      1
                      • ben999B ben999

                        @fotofieber hi thank you for your message

                        I was coming back here to share my findings.... been playing with... ToneAC :joy:

                        Yes you're right, differential drive makes a hell of a difference! each pin of the piezo speaker are connected to its own arduino output (serial resistor on one pin though) that send the same signal in opposition as to get a differential movment.

                        But i don't quite get it :

                        • driving the piezo speaker with up to 25V doesn't improve noise level at all
                        • switching to differential drive @5V (so it's a 10V potential peak-to-peak) opens hell's doors wide open

                        That's the part i dont understand. I'll carry on investigating.

                        Still: noise level is a bit below as compared to same pizeo speaker connected to original alarm enclosure...
                        I might have a go with transistors and try a differential of 2S or 3S LiPo.
                        Also waiting for my oscilloscope to find out!

                        And lastly: ToneAC uses pins 9 and 10... so it's a NO-NO with nRF24 :cry:
                        Enters... ToneAC2. It's inferior (CPU cycle, accuracy, lower freq) in many points except that pins are configurable.

                        More soon... :nerd_face:

                        FotoFieberF Offline
                        FotoFieberF Offline
                        FotoFieber
                        Hardware Contributor
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #18

                        @ben999 said in Piezzo siren/alarm:

                        But i don't quite get it :

                        driving the piezo speaker with up to 25V doesn't improve noise level at all
                        switching to differential drive @5V (so it's a 10V potential peak-to-peak) opens hell's doors wide open

                        You may try to use a 1kOhm resistor parallel to the piezo (as suggested on eevblog).

                        1 Reply Last reply
                        1
                        • mfalkviddM mfalkvidd

                          @ben999 nice work, thanks for sharing.

                          To change pins for the nrf24, use the following in your sketch

                          #define MY_RF24_CE_PIN 7
                          #define MY_RF24_CS_PIN 8
                          
                          ben999B Offline
                          ben999B Offline
                          ben999
                          wrote on last edited by ben999
                          #19

                          @mfalkvidd oh yeah I forgot about that one!!! Thanks a lot! I have used this with a Mega for who-knows-what-reason in the past but completely forgot about it! ToneAC still in the race then, thanks again

                          @fotofieber thanks a lot, but that thread is for high-level hobbyists!!! :scream: Schematics, yummy!!!
                          "replace the resistor with an inductor then you double the swing" but no figures... i'll google that and see where it gets me...
                          I dont even know the specs of my piezo :zipper_mouth_face:

                          FotoFieberF 1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • ben999B ben999

                            @mfalkvidd oh yeah I forgot about that one!!! Thanks a lot! I have used this with a Mega for who-knows-what-reason in the past but completely forgot about it! ToneAC still in the race then, thanks again

                            @fotofieber thanks a lot, but that thread is for high-level hobbyists!!! :scream: Schematics, yummy!!!
                            "replace the resistor with an inductor then you double the swing" but no figures... i'll google that and see where it gets me...
                            I dont even know the specs of my piezo :zipper_mouth_face:

                            FotoFieberF Offline
                            FotoFieberF Offline
                            FotoFieber
                            Hardware Contributor
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #20

                            @ben999 said in Piezzo siren/alarm:

                            @fotofieber thanks a lot, but that thread is for high-level hobbyists!!! Schematics, yummy!!!
                            "replace the resistor with an inductor then you double the swing" but no figures... i'll google that and see where it gets me...
                            I dont even know the specs of my piezo

                            I try to simplify: Take a 1 kOhm resistor and attach each side of it to another pin of the piezo. Don't change anything else.

                            ben999B 1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • FotoFieberF FotoFieber

                              @ben999 said in Piezzo siren/alarm:

                              @fotofieber thanks a lot, but that thread is for high-level hobbyists!!! Schematics, yummy!!!
                              "replace the resistor with an inductor then you double the swing" but no figures... i'll google that and see where it gets me...
                              I dont even know the specs of my piezo

                              I try to simplify: Take a 1 kOhm resistor and attach each side of it to another pin of the piezo. Don't change anything else.

                              ben999B Offline
                              ben999B Offline
                              ben999
                              wrote on last edited by ben999
                              #21

                              @fotofieber :grin: oh yes i got that one correct :stuck_out_tongue_winking_eye:

                              It was more about how to size the inductor and stuff. Guys on these forums know their sh*t, they dont go into much details: "just stick a thing there and you'll be good" :joy:

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • ben999B Offline
                                ben999B Offline
                                ben999
                                wrote on last edited by ben999
                                #22

                                Guys,

                                Thanks all a lot for your input.

                                Seems sorted :

                                • differential drive (ToneAC)
                                • transistor (TIP120 in my case, not sure it's my best move)
                                • 3S louder than 2S, itself louder than 1S

                                Schematic TIP120 and 1k resistors

                                0_1555413823315_Capture.JPG
                                I did also put a 1k resistor in between the piezo speaker pins... but it lowered the tone by quite a lot... :thinking_face:

                                To be tested

                                I'll have a go with an inductance to see what " then you double the swing" means... double the loudness or double the speed ?

                                Thanks again, people involved :wink:

                                FotoFieberF 1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • ben999B ben999

                                  Guys,

                                  Thanks all a lot for your input.

                                  Seems sorted :

                                  • differential drive (ToneAC)
                                  • transistor (TIP120 in my case, not sure it's my best move)
                                  • 3S louder than 2S, itself louder than 1S

                                  Schematic TIP120 and 1k resistors

                                  0_1555413823315_Capture.JPG
                                  I did also put a 1k resistor in between the piezo speaker pins... but it lowered the tone by quite a lot... :thinking_face:

                                  To be tested

                                  I'll have a go with an inductance to see what " then you double the swing" means... double the loudness or double the speed ?

                                  Thanks again, people involved :wink:

                                  FotoFieberF Offline
                                  FotoFieberF Offline
                                  FotoFieber
                                  Hardware Contributor
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #23

                                  @ben999 said in Piezzo siren/alarm:

                                  I did also put a 1k resistor in between the piezo speaker pins... but it lowered the tone by quite a lot..

                                  Cool, you sorted it out! The resistor may only help in an DC setup (one output from the arduino). In your AC setup it is useless.

                                  ben999B 1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • FotoFieberF FotoFieber

                                    @ben999 said in Piezzo siren/alarm:

                                    I did also put a 1k resistor in between the piezo speaker pins... but it lowered the tone by quite a lot..

                                    Cool, you sorted it out! The resistor may only help in an DC setup (one output from the arduino). In your AC setup it is useless.

                                    ben999B Offline
                                    ben999B Offline
                                    ben999
                                    wrote on last edited by ben999
                                    #24

                                    @fotofieber gosh that a good analysis :+1: that makes a lot of sense
                                    Then i can picture things better:

                                    • one output with 0 et +5V is considered as DC
                                    • two output pulling differentially -5V to +5V... looks like a sin curbe... so it's AC !

                                    Breadboard is out and still cabled, i'll have a go asap and confirm

                                    Thanks again for your knowledge

                                    FotoFieberF 1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • ben999B ben999

                                      @fotofieber gosh that a good analysis :+1: that makes a lot of sense
                                      Then i can picture things better:

                                      • one output with 0 et +5V is considered as DC
                                      • two output pulling differentially -5V to +5V... looks like a sin curbe... so it's AC !

                                      Breadboard is out and still cabled, i'll have a go asap and confirm

                                      Thanks again for your knowledge

                                      FotoFieberF Offline
                                      FotoFieberF Offline
                                      FotoFieber
                                      Hardware Contributor
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #25

                                      @ben999
                                      You could try DC (one output) with 12V to the piezo. If you want to use only 5V, the AC solution should be louder, as it gets 10V difference to the piezo.

                                      I usually stop optimizing, when it is good enough. If AC is enough, go with it. :)

                                      ben999B 1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • FotoFieberF FotoFieber

                                        @ben999
                                        You could try DC (one output) with 12V to the piezo. If you want to use only 5V, the AC solution should be louder, as it gets 10V difference to the piezo.

                                        I usually stop optimizing, when it is good enough. If AC is enough, go with it. :)

                                        ben999B Offline
                                        ben999B Offline
                                        ben999
                                        wrote on last edited by ben999
                                        #26

                                        @fotofieber DC+ one output is really poor and voltage has no impact on noise. I have tested with up to 6S LiPo and there's absolutely no gain as compared to 5V DC

                                        AC+ two outputs is a game changer! Much louder right from +/-5V and really a killer @ +/-12V.

                                        So that's it: the first iteration of this project will go for a step-up converter from 5V up to 12V for the piezo speaker.

                                        Thanks folks!

                                        EDIT: could someone suggest a MOSFET (or transistor) that could be used in lieu of the huge (and probably over-sized) TIP120 (that where there, waiting in the drawer :) ). Through-hole is my league. SMD is a bit of a struggle (welding, machining pcb, ...)

                                        Thanks again :smiley:

                                        1 Reply Last reply
                                        0
                                        Reply
                                        • Reply as topic
                                        Log in to reply
                                        • Oldest to Newest
                                        • Newest to Oldest
                                        • Most Votes


                                        18

                                        Online

                                        11.7k

                                        Users

                                        11.2k

                                        Topics

                                        113.1k

                                        Posts


                                        Copyright 2025 TBD   |   Forum Guidelines   |   Privacy Policy   |   Terms of Service
                                        • Login

                                        • Don't have an account? Register

                                        • Login or register to search.
                                        • First post
                                          Last post
                                        0
                                        • MySensors
                                        • OpenHardware.io
                                        • Categories
                                        • Recent
                                        • Tags
                                        • Popular