Summary of circuit features
- Brief description of operation: Detects IR signals from TV remote
controllers
- Circuit protection: No special protection needed
- Circuit complexity: Very simple and easy to build, no need for circuit
board
- Circuit performance: Not very good, detects IR remote controller signals
nicely at 10 cm distance, also sensitive also to normal light and can't be
used on bright light to detect IR remote controller signals
- Availability of components: Original components might not be available
everywhere, suitable components for modificantions
- Design testing: Built quickly from the parts found on my lab, the first
prototype was usable, few different photosensitive transistors tried
- Applications: IR remote controller testing, detecting IR beam, testing of
phototransistors
- Power supply voltage: 9V battery
- Power supply current: less than 1 mA on darkness, up to nearly 20 mA on
bright light
- Component cost: Few dollars
Circuit description
This circuit is a simple IR detector for testing IR remote controllers. The
circuit is based on one phototransistor which receives the IR beam. The NPN
transistor works as an amplifier which feeds current to the led. When this
circuit detects IR or light, the LED is on. So you need to shield the
phototransistor from ambient light if you don't want to do your tests in the
dark. The best way is to fit the phototransistor in a small black tube. I used 2
cm long piece of insulating tube and fitted the phototransistor into the middle
of the tube.
I built my circuit from components found in junk box. The values are not
critical and you can substitute the phototransistor with other type. I have
tried some other types as well, and the circuit works well with them also.
The circuit is designed to be a simple circuit to test IR remote controllers.
The detecting range is typicallty in range of 10 cm to 1 meter depending on the
components used and the strength of the IR source you try to detect.
Component listQ1 BP109 (or similar phototransitor)
Q2 BC238C or BC547
D1 RED LED
R1 390 ohms 0.25W
Modification ideas
Almost any common NPN small signal transistor should work as Q2. If BC238 is
not available BC547 or 2N2222 should work also. If you can not find original
component model for Q1 you cna try almost any phototransistor for this (the
circuit performance might vary but should work somehow with wide variety of
phototransistors).
Other simple ideas to detect IR signal from remote control
If you own a video camera you can use it directly for viewing the IR signal
from the remote control. Just point the remote control to the video camera and
you sould see some flickering light in the video screen/viewfinder. This works
because the CCD elements in the modern video cameras are also sensitive to IR
radiation also. This ideas works with most of the video cameras but might fail
on some (because some older cameras did not use CCD element and some new video
cameras can have very good IR filtering in them).
I one day received a mail telling that you can also use any AM radio to
detech the signals the IR remote controller sends. I tested a small AM radio
(tuned to 530..1800 KHz band) with half dozen IR remote controllers and this
idea really works. When you put the IR remote controller near the radio and
point your IR remote control at the ferrite antenna of an AM radio, you should
hear bleeping sounds from the radio when you activate the remote control. The AM
radio does not detect the actual IR beam, but it will detect the electrical
noise the IR remote controller generates when it operates.
I think that nose noises are form high current pulses sent to the IR LED when
it transmits or the RFI from the controller IC inside the IR remote controller.
The reason why AM radio picks up those well might be that IR remote controllers
used in consumer products typically uses 455KHz ceramic crystal resonator as
part of frequency synthesis circuit. 455KHz happens to be IF for the AM
receivers. Remote generates about 40Khz carrier modulated with typically around
400uS-800uS square wave. You should be able to hear this square wave as between
1-3 kHz audio tone on radio tuned at anywhere in the AM band.
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