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Question: Pulling low on CDS will fully disable the module ?

Open itsjustvenky opened this issue 7 years ago • 6 comments

I have tested pulling LOW on CDS module won't trigger the motion, but I just know whether the module is fully disabled or just triggering part. I kept the module close to my desktop and so I am worried about sitting close to microwave radiation. Any thoughts ?

itsjustvenky avatar Sep 11 '17 23:09 itsjustvenky

I just inhibited the CdS input (Cadmium Sulfide - Light Dependent Resistor ) by grounding but the current drawn stays the same at 3.15 mA at 5 volts Vin. If one is concerned about RF energy then it would be best to switch the VIN with a GPIO (at least 4v) or with a transistor to a higher voltage and then wait for the device to settle for at least 10 seconds on power-up.

barewires avatar Sep 12 '17 16:09 barewires

@barewires Thank you so much for the info. I thought of connecting ESP8266 GPIO directly to 3.3v pin to turn module ON/OFF. The RCWL module required 3mA max for operating, so the GPIO can provide sufficient current. Thoughts ??

Another thing, I read through webpages and I found 20mW/Cm2 is the max allowed according to standards. Thoughts on this ??

Thanks

itsjustvenky avatar Sep 17 '17 15:09 itsjustvenky

The 3V3 pin is a voltage regulated OUTPUT intended to supply external circuitry only. I have tested it at full load of 100 mA and it only gets hot beyond specs above 15 VIN. The VIN is specified as 4-28 volts however 5 VIN is the minimum with a full load drawn on the 3V3 output. View other issues here for further details. I will investigate the workings at 3.3 VIN as you have sparked my curiosity. I am not qualified to comment on RF standards but that does not prevent me from learning it.

barewires avatar Sep 17 '17 16:09 barewires

@barewires You are right. I just tested inputting 3.3v on 3.3v OUT pin and I get tons of false triggers. I get LOW/HIGH randomly on GPIO, I think the only option is to power with VIN with 5V.

itsjustvenky avatar Sep 18 '17 06:09 itsjustvenky

Yes, VIN is the only way to power the device, the specs say 4 to 28 volts and I just tested that. There is about a 10 second delay before the device works after powerup. This should be taken into account if you switch the VIN on. Below 4 volts VIN is unstable.

barewires avatar Sep 18 '17 11:09 barewires

@itsjustvenky

Microwave radiation is non ionising, it does not affect the cells .. if all the input power went to microwaves then (say 5v, 3mA = 15mW) then you are radiating 15mW ... your wifi router is many magnitudes greater as is the phone in your hand. Don't worry about the device, it is harmless.

stonemull avatar Oct 18 '17 04:10 stonemull