Project 125 water alarm, Project 126 human alarm, Project 127 draw an alarm – Elenco Snap Circuits Motion User Manual

Page 64

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Project 125

Water Alarm

Build the circuit shown but initially leave the red & black jumper wires

outside the cup. Turn on the slide switch (S1); nothing happens. Place

the jumper wires into a cup of water and an alarm sounds!

Variants:

● Change the sound by using a 1-snap wire and a 2-snap wire to make

a connection across points A & B, or A & D, or B & C.

● Remove the NPN transistor (Q2) and instead connect the black

jumper wire at point B.

Don’t drink any water used here.

Project 126

Human Alarm

Use the preceding circuit but instead of putting the red

& black jumper wires in the water, touch the metal ends

of them with your fingers. You may have to hold them

tightly or wet your fingers to make this work.

Your body is mostly water, so it

also has more resistance than

the resistors in this set, but

much less than water.

Project 127

Draw an Alarm

Use the circuit from project 125, but omit the cup of water and leave

the loose ends of the jumpers unconnected for now. There is one

more part you need and you are going to draw it. Take a pencil (No.

2 lead is best but other types will also work). SHARPEN IT, and fill

in the shape below. You will get better results if you place a hard,

flat surface directly beneath this page while you are drawing. Press

hard (but don’t rip the paper), and fill in the shape several times

to be sure you have a thick, even layer of pencil lead.

Press the metal ends of the jumper wires on the shape and move

them around over the drawing. If you don’t hear any sound then

move the ends closer together and move over the drawing, add

another layer of pencil lead, or put a drop of water on the jumper

ends to get better contact. with your fingers.

The black core of

pencils is graphite, the

same material used in

the resistors in RV and

the pivot stand.

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Water has higher electrical resistance than the

resistors in this set (RV2, and in the pivot stand), but

much less than air. The NPN transistor acts as an

amplifier, to help overcome water’s resistance.
You could use longer wires and lay them on your

basement floor, if your basement floods during a

storm, then this circuit will sound an alarm!

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