555 TIMER LED STROBELIGHT By Radionuclei95 in CircuitsLEDs15,9189711DownloadFavoriteIntroduction: 555 TIMER LED STROBELIGHTBy Radionuclei95FollowMore by the author: this is my first instructableAdd TipAsk QuestionCommentDownload Be the First to Share Did you make this project? Share it with us!I Made It!RecommendationsRubik's Cube Solver by aaedmusa in Gadgets 28 3.6K Laser-Cut Infinity Dodecahedron (Fusion 360) by thomasj152 in LEDs 160 13K Bending Time: a Guide to Building a 3D Printed Curved LED Clock With WS2812 LEDs and ESP8266 by andrei.erdei in LEDs 19 3.3K Pingo, the Secret Color Clock by Illusionmanager by illusionmanager in Clocks 1 33 3.1K For the Home ContestBig and Small ContestMake It Bridge11 Comments0knexinventer 8 years ago on IntroductionReplyUpvoteCould I hook this up to an led array I have? 1 reply 0ShadowArcherknexinventer Reply 6 years ago ReplyUpvoteYou could use a transistor0RichardR8 8 years ago on IntroductionReplyUpvote9V power? can we modify the circuit to use 5V instead?0elkaddalek 8 years ago on IntroductionReplyUpvotecan you make one so you can adjust the speed with a potentiometer?0Guysmiley86 8 years ago ReplyUpvoteCould this be done with an ldr so it would strobe in the dark and not in the day?? Instead of using a on off switch...0deathofme 9 years ago on IntroductionReplyUpvotecan you use another resistor instead of the two 220??? 2 replies 0Radionuclei95deathofme Reply 9 years ago on IntroductionReplyUpvoteyes you can :-) but increasing the resistance will make the led flash slower, and decreasing the resistance will make the led flash quicker 0Mickey_BoyRadionuclei95 Reply 9 years ago on IntroductionReplyUpvoteyou should use a potentiometer instead then, so you can adjust the flash speed ;)0jamerperson 9 years ago on IntroductionReplyUpvoteDo you have a schematic diagram to go along with this. It is kind of hard to see. Also some steps would be nice. Thank you in advance 1 reply 0J-Fivejamerperson Reply 9 years ago on IntroductionReplyUpvoteI hope this helps.0fishgodcult 9 years ago on IntroductionReplyUpvoteI agree...this looks like a simple thing I can make with extra components and I prefer looking at a schematicPost Comment
0knexinventer 8 years ago on IntroductionReplyUpvoteCould I hook this up to an led array I have? 1 reply
0RichardR8 8 years ago on IntroductionReplyUpvote9V power? can we modify the circuit to use 5V instead?
0elkaddalek 8 years ago on IntroductionReplyUpvotecan you make one so you can adjust the speed with a potentiometer?
0Guysmiley86 8 years ago ReplyUpvoteCould this be done with an ldr so it would strobe in the dark and not in the day?? Instead of using a on off switch...
0deathofme 9 years ago on IntroductionReplyUpvotecan you use another resistor instead of the two 220??? 2 replies
0Radionuclei95deathofme Reply 9 years ago on IntroductionReplyUpvoteyes you can :-) but increasing the resistance will make the led flash slower, and decreasing the resistance will make the led flash quicker
0Mickey_BoyRadionuclei95 Reply 9 years ago on IntroductionReplyUpvoteyou should use a potentiometer instead then, so you can adjust the flash speed ;)
0jamerperson 9 years ago on IntroductionReplyUpvoteDo you have a schematic diagram to go along with this. It is kind of hard to see. Also some steps would be nice. Thank you in advance 1 reply
0fishgodcult 9 years ago on IntroductionReplyUpvoteI agree...this looks like a simple thing I can make with extra components and I prefer looking at a schematic
11 Comments
8 years ago on Introduction
Could I hook this up to an led array I have?
Reply 6 years ago
You could use a transistor
8 years ago on Introduction
9V power? can we modify the circuit to use 5V instead?
8 years ago on Introduction
can you make one so you can adjust the speed with a potentiometer?
8 years ago
Could this be done with an ldr so it would strobe in the dark and not in the day?? Instead of using a on off switch...
9 years ago on Introduction
can you use another resistor instead of the two 220???
Reply 9 years ago on Introduction
yes you can :-) but increasing the resistance will make the led flash slower, and decreasing the resistance will make the led flash quicker
Reply 9 years ago on Introduction
you should use a potentiometer instead then, so you can adjust the flash speed ;)
9 years ago on Introduction
Do you have a schematic diagram to go along with this. It is kind of hard to see. Also some steps would be nice.
Thank you in advance
Reply 9 years ago on Introduction
I hope this helps.
9 years ago on Introduction
I agree...this looks like a simple thing I can make with extra components and I prefer looking at a schematic