GCSE Electronics Project
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GCSE Electronics Project
for my Yr10 project, we have to make something with a little cicruit, and i thought my tank would give me answers, so my plan is
a dryness sensor, so when the water drops to a level below the wires, an LED flashes, and tells me a water change is needed
now, for a 9V battery, would i need to attach a small rubber box with holes in to monitor water depth without passing currents through the whole body of water?
a dryness sensor, so when the water drops to a level below the wires, an LED flashes, and tells me a water change is needed
now, for a 9V battery, would i need to attach a small rubber box with holes in to monitor water depth without passing currents through the whole body of water?
- MatsP
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I would attempt to make a mechanical fixture where you use a float (similar to how the float in a toilet cistern works) to make the contact with a micro-switch (or similar). This way, there will be no chance of electricity making contact with the water.
Of course, the SENSIBLE thing would be to build a (cheap) nitrate meter, and measure nitrate levels, rather than water level, as the evaporation out of the tank is not a good measure of when you need to change water.
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Mats
Of course, the SENSIBLE thing would be to build a (cheap) nitrate meter, and measure nitrate levels, rather than water level, as the evaporation out of the tank is not a good measure of when you need to change water.
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Mats
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- Posts: 407
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- MatsP
- Posts: 21038
- Joined: 06 Oct 2004, 13:58
- My articles: 4
- My images: 28
- My cats species list: 117 (i:33, k:0)
- My aquaria list: 10 (i:8)
- My BLogs: 4 (i:0, p:97)
- Spotted: 187
- Location 1: North of Cambridge
- Location 2: England.
What's the difference between a trip-wire alarm and a water-level alarm? I mean it's certainly something that could be useful, even if it's not necessarily useful for showing when you need to change water...
Essentially, it would do the same thing as a pressure pad, except that it uses a float to indicate water level, and if it goes below (or maybe better, above) it gives off a signal. [Above level signal would be useful if you fill the tank from a hose or similar, to indicate when you need to turn the hose off...]
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Mats
Essentially, it would do the same thing as a pressure pad, except that it uses a float to indicate water level, and if it goes below (or maybe better, above) it gives off a signal. [Above level signal would be useful if you fill the tank from a hose or similar, to indicate when you need to turn the hose off...]
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Mats