I'm designing a very simple led light timer based on the Pomodoro time management technique. For those of you unfamiliar, you work for a set amount of time, take a short break, and repeat.
My end result is to have a 5v USB powered device that lights a green LED for 25 minutes, then switches to a red LED for 5 minutes over and over again. This does not at all need to be accurate...+/- 5-7% isn't going to kill me. Ideally, it'd be small enough of a device, like one of the smaller Altoid tins, to sit on my desk unobtrusively. Though an Arduino-controlled Nixie tube countdown timer does have its charm....
I've found and re-read this q&a, as a start but there are so many options that I'm not sure where I need to start.
From my understanding of the 555, it pulses (I'm thinking of it in astable mode), and triggers something. I'd originally thought I'd need a decade counter to keep TRACK of the pulses, but the page noted above seems to indicate that I can control the time between triggers with resistor and capacitor combinations. Of course, that suggests I'll need some formula to determine proper capacitance and resistance...which I've been unable to find.
Other solutions suggest relays, which I've not worked with yet...so I don't know what I don't know about relays in this solution.
Can someone point me in a good starting direction, or perhaps recommend which schematic on the above page would be most appropriate for my purposes, if any?
Answer
This is a very simple thing to do for a small microcontroller. Even the smallest of them all, the PIC 10F200 can easily to this job. It has a internal oscillator that is well within your accuracy requirements. Otherwise, it only has to control 2 outputs, which is fine since it has 3.
A nice thing about a micro is that you can customize things a bit. For example, you might realize after a while that you don't always notice when the light turns color. It would be easy to have the micro flash the new state at 2 Hz for the first 5 seconds or something.
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