Dreamstime_janefoxik_320915721
Cell towers
ID 217230663 © Christian Offenberg - Dreamstime.com | electronica.de
promo_messe_munich__id_217230663__christian_offenb
ID 312689142 © Chechotkin | Dreamstime.com
LiDAR in autonomous driving
ID 39977536 © Pino Carboni | Dreamstime.com
Transformers on a PCB
ID 326211957 © Kwangmoo | Dreamstime.com
Security IP CCTV camera using solar energy

Impulse-Controlled Sequential Switch Without Active Electronics (.PDF Download)

Jan. 23, 2019
Impulse-Controlled Sequential Switch Without Active Electronics (.PDF Download)

I know, I know—discussing the subject of a relay-based sequence switch in the age of omnipresent microprocessors seems to be a waste of time. After all, relays have been in use for many years. Is it possible to create something new from these already well-known relays? I tried many years ago, and I think that I succeeded.

I admit that this project is late by about 70 years, but I think its clarity of structure and operation deserves some attention. The first thing that makes it stand out is the fact that despite executing the function of a logic circuit, it does not use active electronic elements. In addition, despite the simple structure, it possesses features of much more complex digital systems.

The sequence switch, built on two-coil bi-stable relays, is partially a development of the article “Relay-Based ON/OFF Flip-Flop Remembers State During Power Failure.” In that Idea for Design article, the author, Tommy Tyler, presented a relay-based flip-flop circuit, the trigger concept of which is quite similar to my idea submitted to the Polish Patent Office over 20 years ago (Fig. 1).

Comments

To join the conversation, and become an exclusive member of Electronic Design, create an account today!