Homemade Annoy-a-thing (Annoy-a-tron) by let_it_out_org
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Thinkgeek.com sells a thing called an annoy-a-tron. Its basically a device that, when activated, beeps at a varied interval. While this instructable does not create an exact replica of think geek's annoy-a-tron, if you've got the materials and the know-how, you can make quite a few and deploy an entire fleet of them! :D

(please note that this is not an instructable on soldering or electronic components. prior knowledge is assumed)
 
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Step 1: PARTS!

parts.jpg
YOU WILL NEED:
PARTS:
- 20k ohm resistor (red, black, orage)
- 10M ohm resistor (brown, black, blue)
- 10 uF capacitor
- perforated circuit board
- CMOS 555 timer (MUST be cmos / low power consumption to run on a 3v battery!)
- diode
- 3v battery (2032) & battery holder
- asst. lengths of wire
- mosfet (i use a VN10KM, others may work)
- piezo buzzer (apply current and get a beep, just the piezo element itself will not work for this)
- solder
- switch

TOOLS:
- soldering iron
- wire cutters
- box cutter or exacto
- knowledge of soldering and electronics :D
1-40 of 172Next »
Derek Vigil says: Sep 5, 2011. 5:18 PM
What size of diode did you use?
J-Five says: Apr 13, 2013. 6:16 PM
I believe it's a 1N914 Diode.
KG989 says: Jan 10, 2013. 3:56 PM
This may be a stupid question, but in the breadboard photo what are the large red 4 posted components in the top/bottom left corners of the photo?
GASSYPOOTS says: Mar 24, 2012. 1:21 PM
na the more annoyin one is vuvulza plus fan
glansj says: Nov 21, 2009. 1:43 PM
I made a boardless version shown below. The first three pics are during construction and the last is the final product. It does not use a mosfet. The wait is about a minute with a half second beep.
PB210006.JPGPB210008.JPGPB210009.JPGPB210011.JPG
DavidKaine says: May 30, 2010. 4:40 PM
Wow, those are some massive resistors.  Aren't  they a half watt and 1 watt, respectively? I was thinking about making a boardless one, but using 1/4 watt or smaller resistors.  Would they be able to handle it?
joerice01 says: Jul 2, 2011. 9:47 PM
An smd NE555 chip would work nicely with this.
beehard44 says: Oct 14, 2010. 6:17 AM
yah should work
i used 1/8 watt
raykholo says: Oct 10, 2009. 8:00 PM
any suggestions as to where i might find a cheap piezo as used here?  perhaps chinese store such as dealextreme with free s&h ? :)
thanks
krish98.sai says: May 23, 2011. 4:41 PM
I went to Radio Shack and got it for around 5 bucks, I hope this helps.
raykholo says: May 23, 2011. 5:19 PM
I appreciate the reply, although the original comment is about 2 years old and I've found some better sources since then.

Save yourself a few bucks if you're planning to make more of these:

http://dipmicro.com/store/index.php?act=viewCat&catId=463

or

http://www.goldmine-elec-products.com/products.asp?dept=1108

I'm just giving you the general pages because these places change their inventory every once in a while and I haven't bought any piezos that recently. I can vouch for goldmine's "3 lead piezo disk" - it's ok quality and you get 3 for a buck. just don't drop it or the wire leads will come flying off.

These places also have good prices on all the other components needed for this instructable. If you only want to make on order, I recommend dipmicro electronics (first link).
krish98.sai says: May 24, 2011. 7:08 AM
WOW thats a great price thanks for the heads up!
cricketm24 says: Dec 6, 2010. 7:56 PM
If you skip the mosfet would you connect the wires to each other
Zem says: Nov 22, 2009. 3:21 PM
Help! D= When I apply voltage to my buzzer, it makes no sound. 
beehard44 says: Aug 31, 2010. 4:43 AM
you need to give a frequency to the buzzer, not just plain DC
harishere says: Sep 30, 2009. 11:27 PM
Does this circuit really works with 3v?
aldude999 says: May 25, 2010. 7:41 PM
the voltage rage for the 555 is 4.5 to 16 volts, so it should
beehard44 says: Aug 31, 2010. 4:42 AM
the CMOS version goes down to 2.8V minimum, but if you use the regular one, it might not work
beehard44 says: Aug 27, 2010. 10:39 PM
i wanted to make an SMD version of this, but when i contacted my local electronics dealer (wiltron general merchandise), THEY DONT EVEN KNOW WHAT SMD IS!!!1!!!1!!!
beehard44 says: Aug 31, 2010. 3:49 AM
i'll just use a few SMD chips sampled and some resistors and capacitors scrapped from old electronics.
Nickel1010 says: Nov 8, 2009. 6:36 AM
 Could I change the interval between beeps by making the size of the 10m smaller and making the capacitor bigger?
aldude999 says: May 25, 2010. 7:40 PM
Just change the value of the capacitor, or you could replace the resistor with a potentometer
Colonel88 says: Jan 30, 2010. 11:42 AM
I am going to make one of these and stick it on the ceiling in our Mrs. Blecher's class. She is old and still says Okey-doke :D
aldude999 says: May 25, 2010. 7:38 PM
put it in the ceiling and she'll never find it XD
raykholo says: Feb 19, 2010. 12:52 PM
I hate to bring up the transistor debates again, but the 555 can source 200ma of current, without need for the mosfet/transistor.  So the question is whether it is because of the diode and the voltage drop that it produces that the amplification is needed.  I am aware that it is not directly connected to the output pin and piezo but it is still a thought...
ANDY! says: Nov 22, 2009. 4:25 PM
I made one! it wistles and annoys the heck out of people. I gave it to my friend and it went bezerk  at class!
lmperkins says: Nov 20, 2009. 5:44 AM
Here is my version. I used a 3volt buzzer and skipped the MOSFET. I also played around with the resistor values to get a long pause and a short beep for maximum annoyance. I think it came out pretty nice. Thanks for the Instructable.

Jeff
PB200003.JPGPB200004.JPG
Nickel1010 says: Nov 8, 2009. 10:09 AM
The biggest resistor I can find around my house is 1.5m, but if I used a 100uf capacitor would the interval between beeps be about the same? I'm not sure if I'm using the right logic here..
far.peter says: Nov 8, 2009. 8:30 AM
Can you use a lin comos 555?
Colonel88 says: Oct 7, 2009. 4:04 PM
Hmmm... i did this without a MOSfet, just 555, a capacitor, and a resistor and it works just as well.
tommck says: Jun 23, 2009. 2:43 AM
It would be cool to hear it in action or even better to show some unsuspecting person reacting to it :)
harishere says: Sep 30, 2009. 11:24 PM
Try you tube you will find there, i have seen it working, people going crazy, lol.
raykholo says: Aug 12, 2009. 9:20 AM
my finally finished product: using a normal 555 timer (not cmos), an NPN transistor and running off of 6 or 9 volts. Everything is free form built around an 8 DIP socket and the 555 was inserted when finished soldering...
my breadboarded version has the same exact circuit but a different buzzer, and can easily run off of 3 volts. That can work with a radioshack 3v battery clip. After taking the pics, i added 3 more 20k resistors to get a nice longer beep with a total of 80k ohms, and i might change around the 10m to make the intervals smaller.

U think this can work with an LED? if so then i want to use it in a new project of mine.
annoy a tron 6v.JPGannoy a tron 9v.JPGannoy a tron breadboard 3v.JPGannoy a tron alone.JPG
jamesjamesjames says: Jul 25, 2009. 11:00 AM
i have a perf board where there are columns of copper.. i'm pretty new to this and would be very greatful if someone could draw me up a quick sketch of where to put things! also, what is the 20kohm resistor doing? could i use an alternative value? thanks in advance.
let_it_out_org (author) says: Jul 25, 2009. 12:02 PM
http://www.robotroom.com/Circuit-Board-Tips/Double-Sided-Patterned-Perf-Board.jpg a good example of where the 555 should go. note that the pin are separated from oneanother.

also, the 20kohm is just part of the timing; changing the value would change the beep interval.
raykholo says: Jul 17, 2009. 8:56 PM
just to confirm, in the shematic pin 5 is not connected to anything, right?
let_it_out_org (author) says: Jul 25, 2009. 11:54 AM
correct, NC
raykholo says: Jun 23, 2009. 6:38 PM
would a standard pnp transistor work instead of the mosfet?
i read the comments below about this topic, just unclear whether a pnp specifically will work.

im talking about a 2n3906, here it is on wikipedia: link
and u can find datasheets all over google

thanks
raykholo says: Jul 9, 2009. 5:20 PM
sorry i meant NPN
duckythescientist says: Jul 9, 2009. 6:36 PM
That should work well also. You will need a resistor between pin3 of the 555 and the base of your transistor (about 500ohm should work-just a guess).
1-40 of 172Next »
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