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Parking Sensor

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  • Dan S.D Dan S.

    @hek Received my LED ring in the mail over the weekend. Hooked it up and ran your code. Everything looks to be working great, including the timeout code. Now need to mount and test under real world conditions, i.e,. in the garage with the car. Has anyone done that yet?

    C Offline
    C Offline
    chilump
    wrote on last edited by
    #24

    @Dan-S. Would you mind providing a little detail on your build? I'm totally new and having problems trying to figure out a few things

    Do I need a capacitor? If so will 22uf do and where do I hook it up.

    I really just looking for a few detailed pics so I can hook things up correctly

    Thanks

    hekH Dan S.D 2 Replies Last reply
    0
    • F Offline
      F Offline
      FreakOfNature
      wrote on last edited by
      #25

      My brother just bought a house and I am going to sucker him into taking up this project by building this for him. I want to add some gas sensors and would like advice on best ones to add. I want to monitor CO, LPG, Butane, and fumes you would get off regular old automotive gas.

      1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • C chilump

        @Dan-S. Would you mind providing a little detail on your build? I'm totally new and having problems trying to figure out a few things

        Do I need a capacitor? If so will 22uf do and where do I hook it up.

        I really just looking for a few detailed pics so I can hook things up correctly

        Thanks

        hekH Offline
        hekH Offline
        hek
        Admin
        wrote on last edited by
        #26

        @chilump

        Yes, a cap on the led ring won't hurt. I soldered mine directly on the ring between GND/VCC. 22uF is probably fine.

        1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • C chilump

          @Dan-S. Would you mind providing a little detail on your build? I'm totally new and having problems trying to figure out a few things

          Do I need a capacitor? If so will 22uf do and where do I hook it up.

          I really just looking for a few detailed pics so I can hook things up correctly

          Thanks

          Dan S.D Offline
          Dan S.D Offline
          Dan S.
          Hero Member
          wrote on last edited by
          #27

          @chilump I am moving from the prototype setup to the garage setup. The first picture shows the LED ring connections. I used solid copper wire because it facilitated what I wanted to do. I squeezed the ends of the wire to flatten them and bent them 90 degrees to make it a bit easier to solder to the solder pads on the led ring. The pads are marked D1,5V,GND and D0. D0 is not used in this application. These are the most difficult connections to make.

          Connections.jpg ```
          I mounted the ring on a square piece of 1/4 in particle board, drilling holes to feed the wires through. It only has a primer coat on it in the picture.
          mount1.jpg
          I will connect a 100uf between the 5v and ground connectors behind the board so it cannot be seen and then mount it on the garage wall.
          Mount2.jpg
          Hek's 22uf recommendation is probably good enough, but in reading about led ring applications an the internet 100uf was recommended for Adafruit neopixel rings. How much you need is dependent on the led intensity and how rapidly the signal will be changing--for this case 22uf should be ok.

          I put the distance sensor in one of the standard cases.
          distance.jpg

          As far as wiring to the Arduino is concerned Hek spells all that out on the mysensor home page if you click on parking sensor. DI of the led ring goes to D4 on Arduino, Trig and echo of the distance sensor got to D6 and D5 of the Arduino respectively. Don't wire the led 5V to the Arduino. It should come directly from the power supply since when the leds are full on they can consume more power than the Arduino can supply. I plugged the Vcc and grnd connections from the distance sensor directly into the Ardouino's pins that were so marked. To be on the safe side I plan on using a 5V 2A DC power supply for this application. All grounds must be common.

          C 2 Replies Last reply
          1
          • Dan S.D Dan S.

            @chilump I am moving from the prototype setup to the garage setup. The first picture shows the LED ring connections. I used solid copper wire because it facilitated what I wanted to do. I squeezed the ends of the wire to flatten them and bent them 90 degrees to make it a bit easier to solder to the solder pads on the led ring. The pads are marked D1,5V,GND and D0. D0 is not used in this application. These are the most difficult connections to make.

            Connections.jpg ```
            I mounted the ring on a square piece of 1/4 in particle board, drilling holes to feed the wires through. It only has a primer coat on it in the picture.
            mount1.jpg
            I will connect a 100uf between the 5v and ground connectors behind the board so it cannot be seen and then mount it on the garage wall.
            Mount2.jpg
            Hek's 22uf recommendation is probably good enough, but in reading about led ring applications an the internet 100uf was recommended for Adafruit neopixel rings. How much you need is dependent on the led intensity and how rapidly the signal will be changing--for this case 22uf should be ok.

            I put the distance sensor in one of the standard cases.
            distance.jpg

            As far as wiring to the Arduino is concerned Hek spells all that out on the mysensor home page if you click on parking sensor. DI of the led ring goes to D4 on Arduino, Trig and echo of the distance sensor got to D6 and D5 of the Arduino respectively. Don't wire the led 5V to the Arduino. It should come directly from the power supply since when the leds are full on they can consume more power than the Arduino can supply. I plugged the Vcc and grnd connections from the distance sensor directly into the Ardouino's pins that were so marked. To be on the safe side I plan on using a 5V 2A DC power supply for this application. All grounds must be common.

            C Offline
            C Offline
            chilump
            wrote on last edited by
            #28

            @Dan-S. Thank you very much for taking the time to take pics and write up your project! Can't wait to get home to try.

            Thanks!!!!

            @hek Thanks for the info on 22uf and thanks for thinking up this project. Great tool for me and my kids.

            1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • Dan S.D Dan S.

              @chilump I am moving from the prototype setup to the garage setup. The first picture shows the LED ring connections. I used solid copper wire because it facilitated what I wanted to do. I squeezed the ends of the wire to flatten them and bent them 90 degrees to make it a bit easier to solder to the solder pads on the led ring. The pads are marked D1,5V,GND and D0. D0 is not used in this application. These are the most difficult connections to make.

              Connections.jpg ```
              I mounted the ring on a square piece of 1/4 in particle board, drilling holes to feed the wires through. It only has a primer coat on it in the picture.
              mount1.jpg
              I will connect a 100uf between the 5v and ground connectors behind the board so it cannot be seen and then mount it on the garage wall.
              Mount2.jpg
              Hek's 22uf recommendation is probably good enough, but in reading about led ring applications an the internet 100uf was recommended for Adafruit neopixel rings. How much you need is dependent on the led intensity and how rapidly the signal will be changing--for this case 22uf should be ok.

              I put the distance sensor in one of the standard cases.
              distance.jpg

              As far as wiring to the Arduino is concerned Hek spells all that out on the mysensor home page if you click on parking sensor. DI of the led ring goes to D4 on Arduino, Trig and echo of the distance sensor got to D6 and D5 of the Arduino respectively. Don't wire the led 5V to the Arduino. It should come directly from the power supply since when the leds are full on they can consume more power than the Arduino can supply. I plugged the Vcc and grnd connections from the distance sensor directly into the Ardouino's pins that were so marked. To be on the safe side I plan on using a 5V 2A DC power supply for this application. All grounds must be common.

              C Offline
              C Offline
              chilump
              wrote on last edited by
              #29

              @Dan-S. Can a single 5v 2a adapter be used? In that case would everything be wired to the single power adapter?

              Dan S.D mjbokM 2 Replies Last reply
              0
              • C chilump

                @Dan-S. Can a single 5v 2a adapter be used? In that case would everything be wired to the single power adapter?

                Dan S.D Offline
                Dan S.D Offline
                Dan S.
                Hero Member
                wrote on last edited by
                #30

                @chilump I hope so since that's exactly how I intend to use it. I will wire the arduino and the led ring directly (and separately ) to the adaptor. I don't want to have to deal with 2 separate power supplies.

                C 1 Reply Last reply
                1
                • Dan S.D Dan S.

                  @chilump I hope so since that's exactly how I intend to use it. I will wire the arduino and the led ring directly (and separately ) to the adaptor. I don't want to have to deal with 2 separate power supplies.

                  C Offline
                  C Offline
                  chilump
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #31

                  @Dan-S. Thanks for the guidance! Looking forward to getting it working

                  1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • L Offline
                    L Offline
                    leothlon
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #32

                    This is looking great!
                    But i'm not seeing any "sleeping" is there anyway to have this using the external interrupts on the arduino so it can be running on battery?
                    ( sorry if i'm mistaken, i'm new to arduino :D )

                    korttomaK 1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • L leothlon

                      This is looking great!
                      But i'm not seeing any "sleeping" is there anyway to have this using the external interrupts on the arduino so it can be running on battery?
                      ( sorry if i'm mistaken, i'm new to arduino :D )

                      korttomaK Offline
                      korttomaK Offline
                      korttoma
                      Hero Member
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #33

                      @leothlon that LED ring would burn through your batteries quite fast.

                      • Tomas
                      L 1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • korttomaK korttoma

                        @leothlon that LED ring would burn through your batteries quite fast.

                        L Offline
                        L Offline
                        leothlon
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #34

                        @korttoma
                        Even if it's only active for about 3-4minutes per day?
                        The problem is i got no way of getting power to where i want to place it.
                        And also if i did it would have to be something like 230V to usb adapter.
                        And plugging one of those in outside seems like a fire hazzard (even indoors they are known to start fires).

                        What if i hook it up to a small solar panel to charge the batteries?

                        Otherwise i guess i'll just have to stick with the old tennisball on a string method :D

                        korttomaK 1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • L leothlon

                          @korttoma
                          Even if it's only active for about 3-4minutes per day?
                          The problem is i got no way of getting power to where i want to place it.
                          And also if i did it would have to be something like 230V to usb adapter.
                          And plugging one of those in outside seems like a fire hazzard (even indoors they are known to start fires).

                          What if i hook it up to a small solar panel to charge the batteries?

                          Otherwise i guess i'll just have to stick with the old tennisball on a string method :D

                          korttomaK Offline
                          korttomaK Offline
                          korttoma
                          Hero Member
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #35

                          @leothlon I'm not saying it can not be done but according to the datasheet the LED chip can consume up to 20mA ( http://www.adafruit.com/datasheets/WS2812.pdf ). So with 24 of them you will be looking at almost 500mA for just the LEDs.

                          http://ncalculators.com/electrical/battery-life-calculator.htm

                          btw, there is another thread about safe AC DC transformers here

                          • Tomas
                          Dan S.D 1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • korttomaK korttoma

                            @leothlon I'm not saying it can not be done but according to the datasheet the LED chip can consume up to 20mA ( http://www.adafruit.com/datasheets/WS2812.pdf ). So with 24 of them you will be looking at almost 500mA for just the LEDs.

                            http://ncalculators.com/electrical/battery-life-calculator.htm

                            btw, there is another thread about safe AC DC transformers here

                            Dan S.D Offline
                            Dan S.D Offline
                            Dan S.
                            Hero Member
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #36

                            @korttoma The online documentation I read said:

                            "The pin labeled PWR +5V is the power input pin, and should be connected to a suitable power supply. An input voltage of 5 V is used to power the ring, and each LED on the ring can draw up to 50 mA at 5 V when outputting white at full brightness. That means the ring could draw up to a maximum of around 1.2 A."

                            Although Hek's code does not operate all the pixels at full white brightness, I decided to play extra safe and use a 2A supply.

                            korttomaK 1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • Dan S.D Dan S.

                              @korttoma The online documentation I read said:

                              "The pin labeled PWR +5V is the power input pin, and should be connected to a suitable power supply. An input voltage of 5 V is used to power the ring, and each LED on the ring can draw up to 50 mA at 5 V when outputting white at full brightness. That means the ring could draw up to a maximum of around 1.2 A."

                              Although Hek's code does not operate all the pixels at full white brightness, I decided to play extra safe and use a 2A supply.

                              korttomaK Offline
                              korttomaK Offline
                              korttoma
                              Hero Member
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #37

                              @Dan-S. Yeah I'm sure thats true. Please post a link to the documentation if you can find it. Anyhow I guess we can agree that running this device on batteries would be difficult.

                              • Tomas
                              Dan S.D L 2 Replies Last reply
                              0
                              • korttomaK korttoma

                                @Dan-S. Yeah I'm sure thats true. Please post a link to the documentation if you can find it. Anyhow I guess we can agree that running this device on batteries would be difficult.

                                Dan S.D Offline
                                Dan S.D Offline
                                Dan S.
                                Hero Member
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #38

                                @korttoma link text

                                1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • korttomaK korttoma

                                  @Dan-S. Yeah I'm sure thats true. Please post a link to the documentation if you can find it. Anyhow I guess we can agree that running this device on batteries would be difficult.

                                  L Offline
                                  L Offline
                                  leothlon
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #39

                                  @korttoma
                                  Yea from my calculations i would need to change batteries about once a month.
                                  And with the amount of sun here in sweden i don't think solar charger would help much sadly.

                                  1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • hekH Offline
                                    hekH Offline
                                    hek
                                    Admin
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #40

                                    But isn't the distance sensor rather power hungry as well?

                                    The dist-sensor but be awake all the time taking measurements (which needs to be interpreted by the MCU).. so sleep mode is not an option on this.

                                    BulldogLowellB 1 Reply Last reply
                                    1
                                    • hekH hek

                                      But isn't the distance sensor rather power hungry as well?

                                      The dist-sensor but be awake all the time taking measurements (which needs to be interpreted by the MCU).. so sleep mode is not an option on this.

                                      BulldogLowellB Offline
                                      BulldogLowellB Offline
                                      BulldogLowell
                                      Contest Winner
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #41

                                      @hek said:

                                      But isn't the distance sensor rather power hungry as well?

                                      You could wake it with a reed switch attached to the garage door...

                                      door open, sense and display until steady state and go to sleep on a timeout or door closed interrupt

                                      TD22057T 1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • BulldogLowellB BulldogLowell

                                        @hek said:

                                        But isn't the distance sensor rather power hungry as well?

                                        You could wake it with a reed switch attached to the garage door...

                                        door open, sense and display until steady state and go to sleep on a timeout or door closed interrupt

                                        TD22057T Offline
                                        TD22057T Offline
                                        TD22057
                                        Hardware Contributor
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #42

                                        @BulldogLowell said:

                                        You could wake it with a reed switch attached to the garage door...

                                        door open, sense and display until steady state and go to sleep on a timeout or door closed interrupt

                                        I like that idea. I was planning on having garage door sensors tied in with this anyway. FYI here is a link to the ultrasonic module docs which list 15mA as the current draw.

                                        1 Reply Last reply
                                        0
                                        • rvendrameR Offline
                                          rvendrameR Offline
                                          rvendrame
                                          Hero Member
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #43

                                          Just to add my two cents, as I have a window nearby, I'm planning to run my parking sensor with a solar battery bank, like this one.

                                          http://www.dx.com/p/solar-powered-13800mah-external-battery-charger-power-source-bank-silver-white-281953#.Ve8ICLTOmNM

                                          I'm waiting for the ring now. It is the last piece missing ;-)

                                          Home Assistant / Vera Plus UI7
                                          ESP8266 GW + mySensors 2.3.2
                                          Alexa / Google Home

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