Theory Of Operation - Ramsey Electronics ICI1 Assembly And Instruction Manual

Ir control interface
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ICI1 THEORY OF OPERATION
At first look the ICI1 may seem quite simple, but there is actually quite a bit
to it on the "inside" of the components. Many items are inside the IR receiver
part (U4) and if built up with discrete components it would never fit in this little
kit case. Inside this part there's an IR detector diode, amplifier, AGC circuit,
band pass filter, a peak-hold circuit, an integrator, comparators, and an output
amp. Heck, the part is a kit in itself! Just be glad it is in one nice module all
ready to go. The pre-programmed microcontroller houses several thousand
transistors, memory locations, and an oscillator circuit. As a matter of fact,
building this kit 20 years ago would have been next to impossible with the
complexity of the circuit(s) to accomplish the tasks at hand.
Your IR remote controls send data on a 38kHz carrier, much like radio does.
The digital information is actually modulated onto the carrier frequency. A few
of the reasons for this is to increase range, and decrease interference from
other IR sources such as ambient light. Remember that infrared can also be
thought of as "heat"; it is one of the components of energy that comes from a
heat source. The modulation is transmitted in an OOK (on off keying) fashion,
meaning the IR LED is switched on and off at a rate of 38kHz for a certain du-
ration for a one, and another certain duration for a zero, with pauses of no car-
rier in-between each one and zero. A common remote control format does
some special things to differentiate a one from a zero for digital sending and
0 Bit
1 Bit
receiving of data.
When the IR detector "sees" a 38kHz
IR signal, the output of the detector
goes low (it is inverted), when there is
no 38kHz signal, the output idles high.
On the output of the IR detector you
won't see the 38kHz, just the data that
the 38kHz represents from your IR re-
mote control. This allows the remote
control to save power since the IR LED
is "on" for a minimal amount of time.
ICI1 Page 5

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