Zibb

Design Idea

Cable tester uses LEDs to find faults

Test as many as 16 wires with LEDs as continuity indicators.

Pavel Šádek, Apri, Roznov pod Radhoštem, Czech Republic; Edited by Martin Rowe and Fran Granville -- EDN, 10/22/2009

This Design Idea describes a simple cable-test machine that visually shows continuity issues on a 16-wire cable harness for ultrasonic-parking-aid systems. A subcontractor produces the harness in low volumes, making it impractical to use an automated tester. For simplicity, the test signal drives LEDs for a visual indication of continuity.

The circuit in Figure 1 generates a binary number from zero to 15 (0000 to 1111). You can generate the numbers with a 555 timer and a binary counter, but this circuit uses a tiny, eight-pin microcontroller. A four-wire bus sends the digits to two four- to 16-line 74HC154 decoders, which generate active-low signals on their 16 lines. Inverting the outputs of the driver decoder with a 74HC04 inverter provides a drive signal for an LED and current-limiting resistor on each harness wire.

See all of EDN's
Design Ideas

The tester should produce one and only one illuminated LED for a good wire as the circuit scans the harness. If the scan is fast enough, all LEDs will all appear to be on, although each is on for just one-sixteenth of the time. Figure 2 shows the completed circuit with eight LEDs, but it has room for 16 LEDs.

Broken wires in a harness, wrong wire positions, or other continuity failures lead directly to the turn-off of the corresponding LED. Swapped wires can also lead to the turn-off of two LEDs. Meanwhile, only one cathode is driven high, whereas the others are driven low, and only the cathode's anode is driven low, whereas the others are driven high. So only correctly connected wires could pass this test.

If you need to test harnesses with more that 16 wires, you can cascade additional decoders. You can also use a high-pin-count microcontroller in the same way.



Reed Business Information Resource Center

Featured Company


Related Resources

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT

Feedback Loop


Post a CommentPost a Comment

Related Content

 

By This Author

There are no additional articles written by this author.


ADVERTISEMENT

Knowledge Center


Events

Oxford University Practical RF/Microwave Design Short Course
Dates: 1/18/2010 - 1/22/2010
Location: Oxford, United Kingdom

Phosphor Global Summit 2010
Dates: 3/23/2010 - 3/25/2010
Location: San Diego, CA

Submit an EventSubmit an Event




Technology Quick Links

EDN Marketplace


©1997-2009 Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Use of this Web site is subject to its Terms of Use | Privacy Policy

Please visit these other Reed Business sites