Circuit operation is as the other monostable projects described in this site using the 4093 IC, and the relay must be chosen according load requirements.

A mini DPDT relay such as the Radio Shack 275-259 controls small appliances rated to up than 1 A. Heavy-duty relays should be used to control more powerful loads, but if their coils are rated to more than 100 mA to 500 mA, transistor Q1 should be replaced with a TIP32, and R5 by a 2.2 kg resistor.

A schematic diagram of this timer is shown in Fig. 1.

 

Figure 1 – Schematic diagram of the timer
Figure 1 – Schematic diagram of the timer

 

Proper positioning of the polarized components (diode, transistor, and electrolytic capacitors) must be carefully observed.

The mini DPDT relay is mounted on the solderless board. If you’re using an equivalent, be careful with the terminals’ positions-they could be different.

The load is connected to the relay as shown in other projects in this timer series. R1 adjusts the first time delay, and R2 adjusts the second.

 

IC1- 4093 CMOS integrated circuit

Q1 - 2N2907 PNP general purpose silicon transistor

D1 - 1N4148 general purpose silicon diode

R1, R4 - 2,200,000 ohm to 4,700,000 ohm potentiometers

R2, R3 - 100,000 ohm, 1/4 W, 5% resistors

K1 - 6 or 12 V relay (see text), Radio Shack mini DPDT relay 27 5-249 is a

suitable unit

C1, C2 - 10 µF to 1,000 µF, 12 WVDC electrolytic capacitors

C3 - 100 µF, 16 WVDC electrolytic capacitor

 

 

Datasheets


N° of component