Ever needed an alarm to monitor something but you didn't want to annoy
the neighbours or scare the hell out of the family in the middle of the
night? Using a feature found in most smoke alarms these days, this
little circuit may do the trick for you. When the 9V battery level drops
to about 7.4V in most smoke alarms, they emit a brief chirp at around
40 second intervals. In most cases, this is enough to attract attention,
without the likelihood of waking the whole household. In effect, this
circuit simply powers the smoke alarm at 6.8V, as derived from a zener
diode (ZD1), so that it sounds its low battery warning. Apart from the
zener diode, the smoke alarm draws only a few microamps, with a brief
current spike during the "chirp". Smoke alarms are now very cheap to buy
so this is a good alternative to a piezo siren.
Circuit diagram:
More
information on a common Smoke Alarm chip made by Motorola can be
obtained at:
http://e-www.motorola.com/files/sensors/doc/data_sheet/MC14467-1.pdf
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