prv
Well-Known Member
I'd like to have a horn on Ariam. I already have a speaker up the mast, and I'm soon going to be adding a button to the binnacle anyway for something else, so it's just a matter of something to make the actual horn signal.
In my box of bits I found a small circuit-board which I vaguely remembered as being a signal generator. And indeed, connected up to my new $20 USB oscilloscope, it seems to be emitting a slightly scruffy square wave at about 11v:
Luckily, I have a duplicate of the mast speaker in my shed (accidentally got filled with water when the mast was down, I assumed it was ruined and replaced it, actually seems to be fine). It's a 30 watt 4 ohm horn speaker. Connected up to the wave generator board, it makes a loudish tone. The generator has a frequency control on it, which I've adjusted to something that doesn't sound horrible. I also tried to measure the current going into the speaker and think it was about half an amp.
My knowledge of analogue electronics in general, and speakers in particular, is basic in the extreme. So, questions:
1) Is this waveform into the speaker likely to do it any harm? It should really be smoother, shouldn't it?
2) Though it's irritatingly loud in my study, I suspect this combination will be a bit anaemic on the water. Am I likely to be able to get more noise out of the same speaker, presumably by increasing the voltage? If so, what would be a good way of doing that? I don't really want to involve a packaged amplifier, though a small module would be ok if that's the easiest approach.
I have 5v Arduinos on hand if that would make a better signal source than the wave generator.
(I don't want to just mount an off-the-shelf horn sounder somewhere; I want to use the speaker I already have nestling neatly underneath the radar. I also don't want to get sidetracked into an argument over whether a sailing boat should have a horn in the first place, and will waggle an animated yellow bottom at anyone who tries
)
Pete
In my box of bits I found a small circuit-board which I vaguely remembered as being a signal generator. And indeed, connected up to my new $20 USB oscilloscope, it seems to be emitting a slightly scruffy square wave at about 11v:
Luckily, I have a duplicate of the mast speaker in my shed (accidentally got filled with water when the mast was down, I assumed it was ruined and replaced it, actually seems to be fine). It's a 30 watt 4 ohm horn speaker. Connected up to the wave generator board, it makes a loudish tone. The generator has a frequency control on it, which I've adjusted to something that doesn't sound horrible. I also tried to measure the current going into the speaker and think it was about half an amp.
My knowledge of analogue electronics in general, and speakers in particular, is basic in the extreme. So, questions:
1) Is this waveform into the speaker likely to do it any harm? It should really be smoother, shouldn't it?
2) Though it's irritatingly loud in my study, I suspect this combination will be a bit anaemic on the water. Am I likely to be able to get more noise out of the same speaker, presumably by increasing the voltage? If so, what would be a good way of doing that? I don't really want to involve a packaged amplifier, though a small module would be ok if that's the easiest approach.
I have 5v Arduinos on hand if that would make a better signal source than the wave generator.
(I don't want to just mount an off-the-shelf horn sounder somewhere; I want to use the speaker I already have nestling neatly underneath the radar. I also don't want to get sidetracked into an argument over whether a sailing boat should have a horn in the first place, and will waggle an animated yellow bottom at anyone who tries
Pete