I've spent a week searching out a 555 explanation that made sense to me. This was what I was looking for all along. Great channel, great content, love your style!
Thank you!! I have been trying to build my first 555 timer circuit, and couldn't get it to work, until I hit your video! MY LIGHT DAS BLINKEN!! GOOT YA! hahaha!! And THANK YOU for explaining that I can change the capacitor to change the PWM signal! I'm getting smarter, thank you! :)
Every demonstration that I see today utilizes LEDs. I'm trying to build a multivibrator for small 1.5-3v incandescent bulbs (powered with 3v-9v batteries) to restore some old toys that require vintage bulbs. It seems that incandescent bulbs have far more resistance than LEDs. I made the mistake of purchasing some prefab multivibrator PCBs for LEDs (because I have no knowledge about this realm). The setup was rated to handle 3-15v, so I thought that this would be great for powering my micro 3v lights. The default PCB setup wasn't powering my incandescent bulbs. I was told to remove/skip the resistors leading up to the diodes, and wire directly to the incandescent bulbs. This hack works, but this hack is not really the solution that I want, and it's overloading the components (transistors are quite hot and eventually failed). I'd much rather know how to select components that are correct for the job, instead of banking on the supposed workable range of a default product. Is there an easy way to check the resistance of a bulb (if heat from a bulb can cause varied resistance)? How do I build a reliable circuit that will power them? Someone suggested that I use a 555 timer instead of trying to balance a mutlivibrator. :/ And as far as a 555 goes, I have no idea how items should flow through the chip.
Hello and congratulations for the truly extraordinary video, I wanted to ask you, is it possible to have all 5 LEDs light up at the end of the sequence? and then starts all over again. Hi, I always follow you, you're very good.
Right on. I should have learned this first before I started trying to play with these. I have this 555 memorized now. Shoot I can make my own projects instead of trying to figure out what went wrong. If I had watched this. It would never have taken me as long to figure out some of my 555s were bad out of the box. Thank you. Or are they bad? I have not used the reset. Hmmm? Now I'm wondering.
Thanks Paul, really useful again! I have a particular problem - trying to power my WSPR transmitter over a 2-3 day period with a modern USB power bank . Problem is my supply keeps switching off. I'm assuming that if the power bank doesn't detect a certain level of current draw, it switches off the supply to the USB port. In my case after 30 seconds. Is there a possible use here for the 555 to switch on a load drawing say 50mA, every 15-20 seconds?
hey my friend I need to make a square signal that have not any small changes in frequency or pulse width but ics like 555 timer can not be like that and have small changes is there any way???
I love it when your some of your awesome back issues turn up in my ‘Recommended’ stream Paul! This is great for me and one I will try and figure out, as I have a few spare 555s now... 🤪 👍🏻 🐍
Thank you for this great video. Now I know a little bit more about 555 timer. Can you just tell me in the astable mode, what resistors did you connect to pin 6 and 7 as voltage divider? Thank you.
Hello, I'm going to start learning electronics. What is that board called? Just a plastic pcb board? What size wire would I need to get? Can you point me in the right direction please. Your videos are really inspiring I would love to learn more.
What should I do if I want the 555 timer/decade counter to make a pulse only 8 times? I want a relay to pull 8 times every 2 hours og 4 times every 1 hour.
Sounded like Laverne and Shirley for a moment there the tune You hum,by the way i have several of them jumper pins that have snapped off on the ends, or am I stuck with cheap ones?
first of all, thank you for all your videos. even if sometimes my level is too low for what you say, i learn little by little. thank you. u mention that the ne555 kind of debounces the button. i liked that because i need a hardware debouncer for a non arduino project (already watched you software debouncer video amd it was primo). would you let us know how to use the ne555 as a simple button debouncer. thank you
is there a 555 timer with two output pins and can you make one output pin low when the other one is high and have the two output pins alternate at desired frequency with var resistor? and cap ? , i need it to trigger two transistors ?
@@mykedoes4099 Yep. It's 2 555s on 1 chip! Not sure if I still have one or not. Had gotten one some time ago. But don't know where it went now! (got a big junk box)
When you edit the videos after recording, could you also try to shorten them a bit?.. perhaps take away the silences, drawing on paper, focus issues, putting things in & out of the breadboard.. etc
Hi. Thanks for the prolific rate of content creation! I've subbed. I have to agree with FT...the pace is such that 1.25x and even 1.5x is needed often. I don't want to be negative. Just a suggestion for continuous improvement. But please don't go so far as Great Scott! in terms of pace. I'm a sub of his and like the channel but need to pause constantly...he just goes too fast! I guess the middle way is desired by your viewers. Easier said than done, I know. Whatever the case, thanks for your making these vid's! I share your channel verbally with my students (I'm a teacher).
jcr723 thanks for commenting. if you look at the later videos, I've shortened things a bit. but I'm not an editor lol. I appreciate your support, I'm a teacher as well.
I've spent a week searching out a 555 explanation that made sense to me. This was what I was looking for all along. Great channel, great content, love your style!
Awesome, thank you!
Loving this channel
Video format is very organic
Like getting a personal lesson
Thank you!! I have been trying to build my first 555 timer circuit, and couldn't get it to work, until I hit your video! MY LIGHT DAS BLINKEN!! GOOT YA! hahaha!! And THANK YOU for explaining that I can change the capacitor to change the PWM signal! I'm getting smarter, thank you! :)
Glad to have helped
Great video, I like when you said broken leg on the chip.. nice opening to great video....
Thanks again for your efforts. Cleared up difference between the two modes.
love the laid back attitude :)
Finally a good video explaining the 555 timer
1:09 reminds me of Wayne's World.
I'm from the UK so never understood the original reference when I watched it as a kid.
Thanks for the nostalgia
I don't know how can i thank you.
U help me so much in my studing.
Thank you so much 🌹🌹
hahaha im old enough to remember that show, nice reference man
lavern and shirley
This is the best video I've seen so far on the 555
Very nice presentation. It's a great little chip.
Thanks for posting this, very useful
Welcome
You get a thumbs up just for the song. Everything else was cool too, Thanks for the rundown.
Every demonstration that I see today utilizes LEDs. I'm trying to build a multivibrator for small 1.5-3v incandescent bulbs (powered with 3v-9v batteries) to restore some old toys that require vintage bulbs.
It seems that incandescent bulbs have far more resistance than LEDs. I made the mistake of purchasing some prefab multivibrator PCBs for LEDs (because I have no knowledge about this realm). The setup was rated to handle 3-15v, so I thought that this would be great for powering my micro 3v lights. The default PCB setup wasn't powering my incandescent bulbs. I was told to remove/skip the resistors leading up to the diodes, and wire directly to the incandescent bulbs. This hack works, but this hack is not really the solution that I want, and it's overloading the components (transistors are quite hot and eventually failed). I'd much rather know how to select components that are correct for the job, instead of banking on the supposed workable range of a default product.
Is there an easy way to check the resistance of a bulb (if heat from a bulb can cause varied resistance)? How do I build a reliable circuit that will power them? Someone suggested that I use a 555 timer instead of trying to balance a mutlivibrator. :/ And as far as a 555 goes, I have no idea how items should flow through the chip.
Hello and congratulations for the truly extraordinary video, I wanted to ask you, is it possible to have all 5 LEDs light up at the end of the sequence? and then starts all over again. Hi, I always follow you, you're very good.
Is there a schematic diagram for this circuit?
Right on. I should have learned this first before I started trying to play with these. I have this 555 memorized now. Shoot I can make my own projects instead of trying to figure out what went wrong. If I had watched this. It would never have taken me as long to figure out some of my 555s were bad out of the box. Thank you.
Or are they bad? I have not used the reset. Hmmm? Now I'm wondering.
I have a project and I want to know the names of the tools that I used, can you write them?
Thanks Paul, really useful again! I have a particular problem - trying to power my WSPR transmitter over a 2-3 day period with a modern USB power bank . Problem is my supply keeps switching off. I'm assuming that if the power bank doesn't detect a certain level of current draw, it switches off the supply to the USB port. In my case after 30 seconds. Is there a possible use here for the 555 to switch on a load drawing say 50mA, every 15-20 seconds?
Such great content and an amazing teacher
hey my friend I need to make a square signal that have not any small changes in frequency or pulse width but ics like 555 timer can not be like that and have small changes is there any way???
..I am wondering if the red LED were all connected in series instead...and the runny led are lit by variable timing of + & - ..is that possible?
please please tell me what microphone you are using. if its integrated into a webcamera or camera please tell me which webcam/camera it is
Hope useful for my traffic lights studying
I love it when your some of your awesome back issues turn up in my ‘Recommended’ stream Paul! This is great for me and one I will try and figure out, as I have a few spare 555s now... 🤪 👍🏻 🐍
Thanks a lot. Where I will can see your schematics?
Thank you for this great video. Now I know a little bit more about 555 timer. Can you just tell me in the astable mode, what resistors did you connect to pin 6 and 7 as voltage divider?
Thank you.
I made this video almost 3 years ago. I honestly don't remember. Try putting a potentiometer between 6,7,8. Thats what I do now.
Neat channel! Subbed.
Thank you!
enticed2zeitgeist agree.. underrated. Sure will will pick up on subs
Hello, I'm going to start learning electronics. What is that board called? Just a plastic pcb board? What size wire would I need to get? Can you point me in the right direction please. Your videos are really inspiring I would love to learn more.
Look at amazon for electronics, tie Point Experiment Mini Breadboard
Usually 22 gauge wire
What should I do if I want the 555 timer/decade counter to make a pulse only 8 times? I want a relay to pull 8 times every 2 hours og 4 times every 1 hour.
Connect 9th output to reset
@@learnelectronics thank you! you are the best. what do one do if its 20 times og 57 times?
@@christiannielsen3863 use more than one decade counter and connect the N+1th pin to the reset pins?
great video. thanks
Thanks I have about 5 ne555 videos. It's my favorite ic to play with.
Can u make Tachometer shift light for motorbike with ne555? Please share me
Sorry, no
Looking for a kiss circuit for a knight rider 10 leds
I've done at least 3
Sounded like Laverne and Shirley for a moment there the tune You hum,by the way i have several of them jumper pins that have snapped off on the ends, or am I stuck with cheap ones?
Nice
Thank you!
You're awesome
Love it
first of all, thank you for all your videos. even if sometimes my level is too low for what you say, i learn little by little. thank you. u mention that the ne555 kind of debounces the button. i liked that because i need a hardware debouncer for a non arduino project (already watched you software debouncer video amd it was primo). would you let us know how to use the ne555 as a simple button debouncer. thank you
Look for my video on 555 as a schmidt trigger
@@learnelectronics roger that
thank u paul
is there a 555 timer with two output pins and can you make one output pin low when the other one is high and have the two output pins alternate at desired frequency with var resistor? and cap ? , i need it to trigger two transistors ?
Maybe use a PNP and a NPN transistor, both bases connected to pin 3 of the 555. Then, when pin 3 is high, NPN is "on", PNP is "off", and vice-versa ?
@@takix2007 i like that idea , i have seen some circuits like that..
Just use the 556. It's a dual timer.
@@devilsatan2973 i had no idea there was 556, i know of 555
@@mykedoes4099 Yep. It's 2 555s on 1 chip! Not sure if I still have one or not. Had gotten one some time ago. But don't know where it went now! (got a big junk box)
Laverne and Shirley! lol
Time to drink a glass of Pepsi and Milk....
my age is showing.
Sir how that happened???😂😂😂when you accidentally lifted up that jumper wire.....
The question has been .... what is God? Where is God? Well .... God is the 555 timer, all things to all men and omnipresent
That cap that hes using in the astable section looks to be 100 micro faras
Edit: farats*
edit farts: farads
There are some weird Characteristics with the triple five. That’s it I’m going to break down and find an DSO
I like of course!!!!
..did not really understand what makes a 555 work, or why.
Laverne and Shirley lol
Xhosa is
like it1
All those loopy jumpers make this look SO crappy.
And now I am sad
چوس
When you edit the videos after recording, could you also try to shorten them a bit?.. perhaps take away the silences, drawing on paper, focus issues, putting things in & out of the breadboard.. etc
FT I'll see what I can do to make them shorter. don't miss tomorrow's video... giveaway announcement. and thanks for taking the time to comment
Hi. Thanks for the prolific rate of content creation! I've subbed. I have to agree with FT...the pace is such that 1.25x and even 1.5x is needed often. I don't want to be negative. Just a suggestion for continuous improvement. But please don't go so far as Great Scott! in terms of pace. I'm a sub of his and like the channel but need to pause constantly...he just goes too fast! I guess the middle way is desired by your viewers. Easier said than done, I know. Whatever the case, thanks for your making these vid's! I share your channel verbally with my students (I'm a teacher).
jcr723 thanks for commenting. if you look at the later videos, I've shortened things a bit. but I'm not an editor lol. I appreciate your support, I'm a teacher as well.
why u the heavy breathing?
www.medicinenet.com/congestive_heart_failure_chf_overview/article.htm
oh im sorry for that, ddnt mean it the bad way thanks for the video though, keep it up
Drink more water sir. Your sound like very tired