Vibration Bug

by webcraft in Circuits > Robots

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Vibration Bug

Vibration Bug 01 Toy.jpg
Vibration Bug 02 Step 01 Design the Circuit.jpg

This article shows a vibration bug. The vibration speaker is activated when the bug is placed in water. The device also works as a touch switch.

I learned from those articles:

https://www.instructables.com/Transistor-Vibrator-Kit/

https://www.instructables.com/MOSFET-Touch-Lamp/

Supplies

Components: general purpose bipolar junction (BJT) NPN/PNP transistors - 5, 1 kohm low power resistor - 1, 10 kohm low power resistor - 1, 100 ohm (or 10 ohms) high power resistor - 1, matrix board, vibration speaker - 3.

Tools: wire stripper.

Optional components: solder, Schottky/silicon diode (do not use low power diodes).

Optional tools: soldering iron, multimeter.

Design the Circuit

Vibration Bug 02 Step 01 Design the Circuit.jpg

The vibration speaker is modeled as 500 ohms. Various speakers have different resistor values.

Calculate the maximum vibration speaker current:

Ivbs = (Vs - Vsat) / (Rspeaker + Ro)

= (9 V - 0.2 V) / (500 ohms + 100 ohms) = 8.8 V / 600 ohms

= 14.66666666 mA

Keep in mind that you might need to use a 10-ohm Ro resistor value instead of 100 ohms to increase the current value.

Simulations

Vibration Bug 02 Step 01 Design the Circuit.jpg
Vibration Bug 03 Step 02 Simulations.jpg

I used the old PSpice simulation software, student edition version 9.1.

The maximum vibration speaker current is almost similar to the predicted value.

Make the Circuit

Vibration Bug 04 Step 03 Make the Circuit.jpg

I created the circuit on a piece of cardboard. Using a matrix board is a better method due to risk of water damaging your cardboard circuit.

Attach to Board

Vibration Bug 05 Step 04 Attach the Circuit to Board.jpg

I used blu tack to attach the 9V battery, circuit, and leads to the wooden board.

Testing

Testing shows my sculpture is working.