Download Skema :
Oil Temperature Gauge for 125 cc Scooter
Password : asinan
- no moving parts (so not meter movement), as scooters vibrate a lot!;
- as cheap as possible (around £12);
- robust measuring transducer (avoid NTC thermistors and other ‘exotic’ sensors);
- temperature range 50–140 °C. (122 – 291 °F);
- audible and visual warning in case of dangerous temperature;
- compact;
- waterproof.
IC3.B output is connected to pin 5 of IC1, an LM3914. This very common IC is an LED display driver. We can choose ‘point’ or ‘bar’ mode operation, according to how pin 9 is connected. Connected as here to the + rail, the display will be in ‘bar’ mode. Pin 8, connected to ground, sets the full scale to 1.25 V. R3 sets the average LED current. Pin 4, via the potential divider R7/R8+R9, sets the offset to 0.35 V. Using R8 and R9 in series like this avoids the need for precision resistors.
As per the LM3914 application sheet , R4-R5-R6 and C5 will make the whole display flash as soon as D10 lights (130 °C = 226 °F). Simultaneously, via R10 and T1, the (active) sounder will warn the user of overheating. Capacitor C6 avoids undesirable variations in the reference voltage in ‘flashing’ mode. IC2 is a conventional 7808 regulator and C1– C4 filter the supply rails. Do not leave these out! D1 protects the circuit against reverse polarity.
The author has designed two PCBs to be fit-ted as a ‘sandwich’ (CAD file downloadable from [1]). In the download you’ll also find a document with a few photos of the project. You’ll note the ultimate weapon in on-board electronics: hot-melt glue. Better than epoxy (undoable!) and quite effective against vibration.