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"Open circuit" logic help

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Daltondix

Electrical
Jan 16, 2005
7
Howdy! I'm re-designing a circuit and am in need of a way for notification of an open circuit (via a piezo/transducer). Something to indicate the circuit is open. Since the circuit will be in an open state, the piezo must be powered elsewhere somehow. I can't use an ASIC, FPGA, etc. as it is now; it must be accomplished using discrete components to keep the cost low. Any ideas?
 
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Most multi-meters have a continuity checker (buzzes when impedance is low, < ~.5V). Will that work?
 
Thank you Melone, but I need it built into the circuit. I received a reply from 'Viking' with instructions on how to accomplish this using an NPN transistor, which looks like it should work. I'm off to the lab to verify it.
 
while we almost agree upon short circuit as a result of having DMM's seting a standered for short circuit, open circuit on the otherhand is not, while for some application a 10k resistance is considered open, in others like some touch keypads 100K will be low resistance and for humidity measurements a 1 meg is low.

The best thing is use your DMM to know the exact value of the resistance. but if you know that value you want as a threshold, a simple comparator circuit will be an accurate way to do it.

 
Many piezo devices are of such Hi-Z that they're almost an open circuit to start with...

 
...if so, then you could swamp the piezo device with a 10M parallel resistor to give you something to measure (assuming that the open circuit that you're looking for is in the wiring).

 
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