G
groupstudy2001@yahoo.co.uk
Is it practical to put together a circuit that would show either a
green or a red LEDs for each of eight inputs which are between -30V and
+30V. I only know the basics of a bipolar transistor-based driver and
am faced with the problem of the wide input range that the RS232
standard permits. In practice 3V to 20V should be enough, though would
prefer it to be safe to 30V. The intention is:
1) an input between -30V and -3V to light a red LED for RS232 logic 1,
a -ve voltage
2) an input between -3V and +3V to light no LED
3) an input between +3V and +30V to light a green LED for RS232 logic
0, a +ve voltage
and this will be needed eight times. Perhaps a driver IC?
Now the fun part: I won't know which of the eight inputs is the ground
line. Can I connect all via separate high value resistors to a common
point and use that as ground reference? If I can I guess the impedance
of any signal would be very high and then the LED driver would need to
be very high input. I guess an op-amp would do it but not practical as
I need eight. Is there a better way? Much appreciate any help.
green or a red LEDs for each of eight inputs which are between -30V and
+30V. I only know the basics of a bipolar transistor-based driver and
am faced with the problem of the wide input range that the RS232
standard permits. In practice 3V to 20V should be enough, though would
prefer it to be safe to 30V. The intention is:
1) an input between -30V and -3V to light a red LED for RS232 logic 1,
a -ve voltage
2) an input between -3V and +3V to light no LED
3) an input between +3V and +30V to light a green LED for RS232 logic
0, a +ve voltage
and this will be needed eight times. Perhaps a driver IC?
Now the fun part: I won't know which of the eight inputs is the ground
line. Can I connect all via separate high value resistors to a common
point and use that as ground reference? If I can I guess the impedance
of any signal would be very high and then the LED driver would need to
be very high input. I guess an op-amp would do it but not practical as
I need eight. Is there a better way? Much appreciate any help.