My Home-Made Cell Phone Triggered Circuit
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My Home-Made Cell Phone Triggered Circuit
Sorry if this is the wrong place to post this, but I couldn't find any other categories that this would fall under. This is a small project that I'm working on that I thought I'd share with you guys here, especially to see if there are any electronic hobyists or electrical engineers in the making.
So here I made a cell-phone triggered circuit for fun that basically gets triggered by a cell phone.
You call the cell phone, it rings, and sends out a signal to a circuit.
This is very useful for various things like launching a rocket (which I've already done), launching off fireworks, opening your garage door, turning on a webcam, and copious other different applications.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QpOzitB93Ak
The phone I used was a $10 disposable phone that I got from Wallmart.
I plan to eventually possible turn this much bigger project by making a cell-phone controlled RC car. Basically you call the phone attached to the car which utilizes a PIC 2 microprocessor, and then you can control it with the keypad of the phone that called it.
Note:
You can ignore the piece of paper in the background, I posted this on my home forum and I just wanted to prove that it was made by me, by no means am I trying to advertise the forum.
So here I made a cell-phone triggered circuit for fun that basically gets triggered by a cell phone.
You call the cell phone, it rings, and sends out a signal to a circuit.
This is very useful for various things like launching a rocket (which I've already done), launching off fireworks, opening your garage door, turning on a webcam, and copious other different applications.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QpOzitB93Ak
The phone I used was a $10 disposable phone that I got from Wallmart.
I plan to eventually possible turn this much bigger project by making a cell-phone controlled RC car. Basically you call the phone attached to the car which utilizes a PIC 2 microprocessor, and then you can control it with the keypad of the phone that called it.
Note:
You can ignore the piece of paper in the background, I posted this on my home forum and I just wanted to prove that it was made by me, by no means am I trying to advertise the forum.

- CompKronos
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- bibbit
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But do people open garage doors with cell phones in Iraq? I think not.Cuda wrote:The Applications of such things have already been put into use. In Iraq, a lot of IEDs use the same principal to the letter using cell phones as remote detonators.

Anyway yeah, this is pretty neat, I would like to see a video of something a bit more practical, for example the rocket.
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My college learning community did this last Thursday and here is the video.bibbit wrote:But do people open garage doors with cell phones in Iraq? I think not.Cuda wrote:The Applications of such things have already been put into use. In Iraq, a lot of IEDs use the same principal to the letter using cell phones as remote detonators.![]()
Anyway yeah, this is pretty neat, I would like to see a video of something a bit more practical, for example the rocket.
You can skip to about 3:45 for the launch
http://www.new.facebook.com/video/video ... 2408920620

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tucker933 wrote:Yes, but it would be much more complicated and for his uses, unnecessary.CompKronos wrote:I noticed in the video that it appears the output is not a stable pulse is there anyway to make the pulse one long stable pulse?
You just add the positive terminal from the phone into a gate of a thyristor, and then have the anode & cathode be connected to a external power source, such as a 9V battery.CompKronos wrote:I noticed in the video that it appears the output is not a stable pulse is there anyway to make the pulse one long stable pulse?
Then the LED will stay lit, even once you hang up.

- RaVNzCRoFT
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Lol, that was a question in the exam I just did.CompKronos wrote:I noticed in the video that it appears the output is not a stable pulse is there anyway to make the pulse one long stable pulse?

Depends whether you want a bistable or not. I'd guess a relay and diode should do it.Then the LED will stay lit, even once you hang up.
For anybody still wondering where FTD has gone, here it is.
Re: My Home-Made Cell Phone Triggered Circuit
Phag.twolvesfan624 wrote:Sorry if this is the wrong place to post this, but I couldn't find any other categories that this would fall under. This is a small project that I'm working on that I thought I'd share with you guys here, especially to see if there are any electronic hobyists or electrical engineers in the making.
So here I made a cell-phone triggered circuit for fun that basically gets triggered by a cell phone.
You call the cell phone, it rings, and sends out a signal to a circuit.
This is very useful for various things like launching a rocket (which I've already done), launching off fireworks, opening your garage door, turning on a webcam, and copious other different applications.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QpOzitB93Ak
The phone I used was a $10 disposable phone that I got from Wallmart.
I plan to eventually possible turn this much bigger project by making a cell-phone controlled RC car. Basically you call the phone attached to the car which utilizes a PIC 2 microprocessor, and then you can control it with the keypad of the phone that called it.
Note:
You can ignore the piece of paper in the background, I posted this on my home forum and I just wanted to prove that it was made by me, by no means am I trying to advertise the forum.

