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Here's a slick little peak-reading indicator.

In my quest to find the right kind of meters


for some of my projects, I became a bit
frustrated with all the types and styles out
there, the scarcity of exactly the correct
ranges and scales, and the cost.
Down East Microwave (DEMI) has a product
offering that is a nice alternative...it's a LED
bar graph display that uses a 20-pin LED
package with 10 devices in it; the idea and
basic design is credited to Dave (WW2R). In
the DEMI display, the first few segments are
green, the middle ones are yellow, and the
last 2 or 3 are red; makes a nice eye-catching
display. The LED bar component can be
purchased from many suppliers in red, green,
yellow, and the multi-color version, though
that last one is a bit pricey in small quantities.
Looking at the DEMI product, and being the
curious sort, I thought I might like to try to
make one; pretty silly, I admit, since their kit
is reasonably priced. The first hurdle was
finding the driving chips...most of the
distributors I checked with listed them as a
discontinued part with no stock, so I decided
to design my own version using common
discrete components.
What I wound up with is the unit shown here; it's small...about 1.3 x 2.5 inches. As designed, it requires only 60 millivolts to light the first
segment, with each additional segment fully illuminated in 60 mv steps. As each segment approaches full brightness, the next segment
begins to illuminate, allowing for some in-between interpretation. Full scale requires 600 millivolts input, though the gain of the driving
chip can be set to make it more (or less) sensitive. It will accept either a positive or a negative input signal, and runs on anything from 8 to
15v at 10 to 110 ma. I'm using two of them on one of my amplifiers to monitor forward and reflected power. Power meters are always
suspect in accuracy (they are only as accurate as the detectors feeding them), so a relative indicator like this one was an easy choice. RF
doesn't bother it at all, even at the KW level.
A builder can mount it into a panel in the vertical or horizontal using the two mounting holes provided, or as in the case of the amplifier
referenced above, mount it to a support bracket located just behind the panel. It's a bit of a chore to cut a rectangular hole to position the
face of the bar display flush into a panel, but worth the effort to do so.
The basic design idea I had was to use a diode to step the LED segments apart from one another. A diode drops about the same amount
of voltage across it's junction as a transistor does from emitter-to-base (which is a diode itself), making it a good sequencing component.
The diode feeds a transistor switch, which turns on it's individual LED segment. By placing 9 diodes in series after the first transistor
switch, each segment illuminates in step, following the input voltage ramp.
The only other thing to do was to drive all of this with an opamp, which can be varied in gain for more or less sensitivity, and will accept a
negative signal on it's inverting input, or a positive signal on it's non-inverting input. Almost any diode, transistor, or op-amp can be used
in this design; I chose the ones I use the most...bas16 diodes, mmbt2222 transistors, and an LM324 opamp (this is a quad opamp, but only
one of the 4 individual units is used). If you are able to make your own PC boards, the artwork for this is here. The schematic is shown
below.
Another thing worth mentioning is the ability to mount the display on either side of the board; because most components are surface-
mount, and leave plenty of clearance for mounting the LED bar into a panel, it isn't necessary to mount the display bar on the back side of
the board.
The tri-color displays present a different situation; different manufacturers put the red led segments on different ends of the display bar,
and since we usually want the red segments to illuminate last, those segments need to be oriented toward Q10.
The HP tri-color displays mount to the component side, but I've found most of the other makers put the red segments at the other end,
and those must mount on the back side of the board if those segments are to illuminate last.
The board shown to the right is the most
current revision being supplied in the kits
(v5). It is exactly the same as v4 except for
R22, which was changed to a trimmer resistor
to allow the sensitivity to be adjusted. This
won't matter for those of us using an
adjustable detector, but if you are using a
detector without an adjustable output, this
feature will allow full scale to be adjustable
from less than 1 volt to more than 15 volts.
The trimmer resistor can be mounted to either side of the board, and should be
mounted to the side facing away from the panel the display will be mounted to
(this allows access to the adjustment and prevents the part from interfering with
mounting).
The most common method of mounting the LED display bar and trimmer resistor
is the way they are pictured here.

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