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Lux Meter

A simple lux meter for my photolab

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I built a lux meter for my darkroom photolab.
It is used to measure intensity of light hitting the photopaper to reduce the chance of over or underexposing.

It works with a simple photodiode and opamp circuit(https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transimpedance_amplifier#DC_operation), has a big scale which can be read with ease in the dark and a range select switch for brighter and darker areas.

I plan to tint the case with a nice colour, write labels, add a knob to the switch, rebuild the sensor donge with a nice case and maybe try to (as good as it can be done without proper equipment) calibrate the scale.

But apart from that it is working fine.

schematic_sensor.pdf

This are the schematics of sensor head.

Adobe Portable Document Format - 12.70 kB - 11/05/2021 at 20:30

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Florian Wilhelm Dirnberger wrote 11/08/2021 at 05:16 point

Hello Johannes,

you may know that already, but you could shrink the whole device considerably by using a brightness sensor like TSL2591 and a µC like RasPi Pico which drives then two or more 7-Segment-Displays.

Expenditures for such a device would be between 15€ - 20€, so, yes, probably more expensive than your system if you are using recycled parts.

Grüße aus Nürnberg

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Johannes wrote 11/08/2021 at 16:20 point

Thank you for your tip!

Indeed my costs were very low, I think I only ordered opamp and diode for <5€, everything else including wood for the case was reused from scrap or old leftovers (which of course doesn't mean they are free).

One thing you do not want in your darkroom is a glowing display bringing more light into the dark which is why I opted for a big moving coil instrument. But I get your point, it does have benefits to not reinvent the wheel and use of the shelf sensors, one of them being calibration.

Grüße aus Frankfurt

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Florian Wilhelm Dirnberger wrote 11/08/2021 at 17:42 point

Ah yes of course. Then analog instrument is the best solution. 

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Ken Yap wrote 11/04/2021 at 23:36 point

That's cool. 👍 Many decades ago, a light meter on the same principles increased my proportion of correctly exposed paper. Now all you have to do is couple it to a enlarger lamp timer.

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Johannes wrote 11/06/2021 at 00:48 point

Thank you!

For now it will be done by hand. But how could the light meter be coupled to the timer? It had to be in two steps I guess, measuring light intensity and calculating exposure time through a empirically selected factor. Then in the second step exposure the photopaper with the calculated time.

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Ken Yap wrote 11/06/2021 at 01:33 point

Send an analog signal to the MCU controlled timer and then it's just a matter of software to do the computation.

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